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Review
. 2001 Aug;27(4):211-20.
doi: 10.1053/ctrv.2001.0229.

New options for outpatient chemotherapy--the role of oral fluoropyrimidines

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Review

New options for outpatient chemotherapy--the role of oral fluoropyrimidines

D Cunningham et al. Cancer Treat Rev. 2001 Aug.

Abstract

For several decades fluoropyrimidines, especially 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), have played a role in standard chemotherapy regimens for a range of solid tumours, including breast and colorectal cancers. In recent years, schedule modification and biomodulation have achieved improved efficacy and tolerability. However, the complications arising from infused intravenous administration are well-recognized and there is an unmet medical need for oral agents with improved efficacy and tolerability, offering more convenient outpatient therapy. Several oral fluoropyrimidines are in development, including capecitabine, UFT (uracil plus tegafur), S-1 and eniluracil. As yet, only UFT/leucovorin and capecitabine have been evaluated in randomized phase III clinical trials in metastatic colorectal cancer. Both have demonstrated safety benefits and equivalent survival compared with the Mayo Clinic regimen, and capecitabine has demonstrated a significantly superior response rate. Time to disease progression was equivalent to the Mayo Clinic regimen with capecitabine, but inferior with UFT/leucovorin. Capecitabine is also effective in patients with taxoid-pretreated metastatic breast cancer, a population which previously had no established treatment options. Both capecitabine and UFT/leucovorin are being evaluated in combination with irinotecan and oxaliplatin in colorectal cancer, and vinorelbine and docetaxel/paclitaxel in breast cancer. In the future, these more convenient, oral fluoropyrimidines may replace intravenous 5-FU in the treatment of breast and colorectal cancer.

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