Abstract

Between 1980 and 1992, 14 patients (median age 50 years) with penile carcinoma were treated with multidrug combination chemotherapy in our institution. Twelve patients had Stage IV (Jackson classification) tumor, 1 patient each had Stage III and Stage II. All patients received cisplatin-based chemotherapy. Cisplatin was associated with either 5-fluorouracil (4 patients), methotrexate and bleomycin (4 patients), methotrexate (3 patients), Adriamycin (1 patient), bleomycin and vinblastine (1 patient), or bleomycin and epirubicin (1 patient). Thirteen patients were evaluable for response. Objective response was encountered in 2 patients (15%) with 1 complete response and 1 partial response. Response duration was difficult to determine because of additive radiotherapy or patient was lost to follow-up. There were 2 patients with long-term evidence of no disease among 12 patients with Stage IV disease. These 2 patients received complementary irradiation in association with the chemotherapy. The response rate was dismal in our series. Methotrexate-based regimens seem to be the most active. The bimodality treatment with multidrug chemotherapy and radiotherapy for advanced penile cancer could offer a survival advantage in the management of these patients.

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