Abstract

A 3 week treatment schedule consisting of 2 weeks of S-1 therapy and 1 week of no therapy was introduced to reduce the toxicity and increase the convenience of combination chemotherapy. Hepatic dysfunction (HD) is common in patients with biliary tract cancer. A phase I study was conducted to assess the effects of a 3 week treatment schedule in Asian patients with or without HD. Forty-six patients were stratified into four groups, according to the HD criteria of the National Cancer Institute Organ Dysfunction Working Group. A three dose escalation schema was used. In the normal hepatic function group, two dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) events occurred among 12 patients at the prespecified maximal dose of 100 mg/m²/day. This dose was thereby established as the maximal tolerable dose (MTD). No DLT events were observed at the predefined maximal dose of 80 mg/m²/day in the mild HD group. In the moderate HD group, two DLT events occurred among five patients treated with 80 mg/m²/day, and the MTD was defined as 70 mg/m²/day. Two of six subjects in the severe HD group experienced DLT events at doses of 60 mg/m²/day and none developed DLT events at 50 mg/m²/day. The MTDs for a 3 week schedule of S-1 treatment were defined in patients with or without hepatic dysfunction. A 3 week treatment regimen of S-1 might be a platform for combination with newer cytotoxic agents or biologics.

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