Effects of intensive induction chemotherapy for extensive-disease small cell bronchogenic carcinoma in protected environment-prophylactic antibiotic units
- PMID: 6322584
- DOI: 10.1016/0002-9343(84)90658-2
Effects of intensive induction chemotherapy for extensive-disease small cell bronchogenic carcinoma in protected environment-prophylactic antibiotic units
Abstract
Fifty-five patients with extensive-disease small cell bronchogenic carcinoma received three courses of intensive, inpatient, remission induction chemotherapy in (25 patients) or out (30 patients) of protected environment-prophylactic antibiotic (PEPA) units. Chemotherapy consisted of ECHO induction (E = epipodophyllotoxin VP-16-213; C = cyclophosphamide; H = hydroxydaunorubicin; O = Oncovin) and PRIME maintenance (PR = procarbazine; I = ifosfamide; ME = methotrexate). All evaluable patients (22 in the protected environment group and 26 in the control group) had a complete (50 percent in the protected environment group and 54 percent in the control group) or partial (50 percent in the protected environment group and 46 percent in the control group) remission. Median response and survival durations for both treatment groups were similar. The median survival duration of patients with a complete remission favored the protected environment group (16.5 versus 12.67 months; p = 0.20). Two patients (one from each group) are alive and disease-free for more than four years. Myelosuppression was intense and more pronounced in the protected environment group (p less than or equal to 0.01). Infectious complications were less common in patients receiving intravenous prophylactic antibiotics and in those treated with intravenous antibiotics in PEPA units (p less than or equal to 0.04). There were no treatment-related deaths, although treatment might have contributed to the death of three patients in the protected environment group and four in the control group. The administration of intensive ECHO induction chemotherapy to patients with extensive small cell bronchogenic carcinoma produced a high complete remission rate, although there was no significant long-term survival advantage over a program of less intensity. The administration of intravenous prophylactic antibiotics and the use of PEPA units significantly reduced the infectious morbidity of chemotherapy.
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