Abstract

Pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) is doxorubicin HCl encapsulated in long-circulating STEALTH® liposomes (Doxil®). PLD achieves good response rates and many patients maintain long-lasting stable disease (SD), which is one of the advantages. In addition, the clinical benefit is high in platinum-resistant disease, and PLD is thus considered to be the first option. PLD is associated with a number of adverse events, but these events are mild to moderate. PLD is safer for heavily pretreated patients than topotecan and gemcitabine due to mild bone-marrow toxicity, but that nonhematotoxity, such as PPE, stomatitis, mucositis, and other cutaneous reactions were the most common side effects attributable to PLD. Based on a review of previous studies, there are no differences in efficacy between 50 and 40 mg/m2of PLD, therefore, a dose of 40 mg/m2is preferable in patients with platinum-resistant disease to reduce adverse events. The 1-hour infusion schedule every 4 weeks makes PLD easy to administer. A rational approach to combine PLD with other drugs should take the slow accumulation and delayed peak of PLD in tumors into consideration. When combined with other useful agents, the lower dose of PLD (30 to 35 mg/m2) with a 3-week schedule may reduce severe PPE and stomatitis with negligible effects on the level of DI and the therapeutic efficacy.

Highlights

  • Epithelial ovarian cancer is sensitive to chemotherapy and approximately 75% of patients achieve complete clinical remission after the initial treatment

  • pegylated liposomal doxorubicin (PLD) (Doxil®) is doxorubicin HCl encapsulated in long-circulating STEALTH® liposomes

  • Doxorubicin has been associated with a poor response in recurrent ovarian cancer, PLD is active, and is an emerging option for patients with platinum-refractory and -resistant disease

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Summary

Introduction

Epithelial ovarian cancer is sensitive to chemotherapy and approximately 75% of patients achieve complete clinical remission after the initial treatment. Relapsed patients with a treatment-free interval (TFI) of 12 months or less, but a significant efficacy in OS with PLD compared to GEM (Table 2).[26] From the results of the above phase III studies, PLD was considered to have similar efficacy as other novel drugs on platinum-resistant disease; it was more effective at improving the survival rate in patients with recurrent ovarian cancer, including platinum-sensitive cancer, than other drugs.

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