Abstract

Purpose. The study was performed to assess the antitumour activity and toxicity of a 72-h continuous infusion of single-agent etoposide as second-line treatment for patients with locally advanced or metastatic soft tissue sarcoma (STS), following reports of substantial activity using this schedule of etoposide administration as first-line treatment in combination with ifosfamide. Patients/method. This was an open phase I/II trial performed at a single institution in patients with metastatic or locally advanced STS who had failed first-line treatment with doxorubicin + ifosfamide combination chemotherapy or, less commonly, single-agent treatment with doxorubicin or ifosfamide. Etoposide was given as a continuous intravenous infusion over 72 h. The starting dose level was 200 mg m-2 day-1 × 3 escalating in 10% steps in cohorts of three patients until dose-limiting toxicity was encountered. Results. Seventeen patients were treated, median age 47 years (range 26–71 years). No responses were seen in 16 assessable patients despite etoposide levels in the cotoxic range. The steady-state plasma concentration exceeded 8 μg ml−1 in all patients and in patients treated at ≥ 600 mg m −2 the mean steady-state level was 14.4 μg ml −1. The median event-free survival was 6 weeks (95% confidence interval (CI) 3.31–8.69) and the overall survival 16 weeks (95% CI 9.28–22.72). The maximum tolerated dose in this pretreated patient group was 200 mg mm-2 day-1 × 3. The dose-limiting toxicity was myelosuppression. Discussion. Etoposide given by 72-h infusion is inactive as second-line chemotherapy in STS. It is associated with significant toxicity when given in these doses, in this patient group.

Highlights

  • Etoposide (VP-16-213) is a semi-synthetic derivative of podophyllotoxin

  • -z, in which ifosfamide was given at 5 g m and doxorubicin at either 50 or 75 mg m -2, the latter dose supported by granulocyte-macrophage colonystimulating factor (BM-CSF)

  • All 17 patients were assessable for toxicity, 16 were assessable for response and one patient died due to neutropeniarelated infection prior to any response assessment

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Summary

Introduction

Etoposide (VP-16-213) is a semi-synthetic derivative of podophyllotoxin It first underwent clinical trials 20 years ago. It has significant activity in lymphoma, leukaemia and small cell lung cancer and is included in most standard regimens for the treatment of germ cell tumours. The initial trials of etoposide as a single agent in the treatment of soft tissue sarcoma (STS), almost all carried out in pretreated patients, have been disappointing. Welt et al reported a dose escalation study in pretreated patients with a 3-day alternating schedule.. A phase II EORTC study using a treatment schedule of 130 mg m- po daily for 5 days every 3 weeks, in mostly heavily pretreated patients, reported only one partial response (PR), which lasted 19 months, in 29 patients.

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