Abstract
463 Background: FOLFIRINOX therapy is associated with improved outcome in patients with gastrointestinal cancers. The regimen can be associated with significant toxicity and empiric dose modifications are often used. We analyzed 1) real-world prescribing patterns of FOLFIRINOX and 2) toxicity of therapy. Methods: Patients undergoing FOLFIRINOX chemotherapy at an academic, NCI-Designated Comprehensive Cancer Center were identified and electronic medical records reviewed. Patients who received at least one dose of FOLFIRINOX were included. Chemotherapy dose, growth factor use and toxicity data was abstracted for the first 8 weeks. ‘Standard FOLFIRNOX’ was defined as the regimen utilized by Conroy et al (NEJM 2011). Any empiric reduction/withholding of drug dose for cycle 1 was classified as ‘modified FOLFIRINOX’. Bivariate analysis was performed on the data. Results: There were 111 patients seen between 5/2011-3/2017 and 94% had pancreatic cancer. Age range was 29-87 years and 52% were female. 59% received ‘modified FOLFIRINOX’ and 20% received empiric growth factors. Line of therapy for standard vs modified respectively was 71.1% vs 45.5% for 1st, 17.8% vs 36.4% for 2nd, and 11.1% vs 18.2% for beyond 2nd (p = 0.03). Patients with ‘modified FOLFIRINOX’ were more likely to have metastatic disease (p = 0.01), have received second line or beyond, and higher ECOG score (p = 0.03). Patients with ‘modified FOLFIRINOX’ had a trend toward fewer treatment-related ED visits or hospitalization vs ‘standard FOLFIRINOX’ (27.2% vs 42.2% p = 0.10) and fewer treatment delays (25.8% vs 42.2% p = 0.07). Conclusions: In the real world setting, a majority of patients on FOLFIRINOX receive empiric dose modifications. Although modified dose did not translate to a significant difference in ED visits, hospitalizations or treatment delays, there was a trend toward fewer events.
Published Version
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