Abstract

To evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of capecitabine as a salvage chemotherapy regimen in Chinese patients with recurrent or metastatic nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy, 17 patients with recurrent or metastatic NPC previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy as adjuvant or palliative treatments received oral capecitabine at a dose of 1.25 G/m 2 twice daily in 3-week cycles consisting of 2 weeks of treatment followed by rest period of 1 week. Seven patients had local recurrence, seven had distant metastases, one had loco-regional recurrence, and two had both local/regional recurrence and distant metastases. Patients received a median number of three cycles of capecitabine (range: 1–6). The median follow-up was 7.5 months (range: 3–25.3). All patients were included in the efficacy and adverse events analysis. Three patients (17.6%) achieved partial response and one patient (5.9%) achieved complete response, with an overall response rate of 23.5% (95% confidence interval, 7–50%). The duration of response's were 4.2, 5, 6+, and 23.1+ months. Nine patients (52.9%) had stable disease whereas four (23.5%) had progressive disease. The median time to progression was 4.9 months. The median survival was 7.6 months. Five patients are still alive with an estimated 1-year survival rate of 35%. Treatment-related adverse events were generally mild except hand–foot syndrome which occurred in 58.8% of patients. Capecitabine is an effective salvage regimen in patients with recurrent and metastatic NPC. Capecitabine as a single agent or in combination with other chemotherapeutic agents or treatment modalities should be further studied in NPC.

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