Abstract
The introduction of aggressive combination chemotherapy has not been accompanied by any significant prolongation of survival in metastatic breast carcinoma. Hence, there is a need of less toxic but--in terms of palliation--effective chemotherapeutic regimens. This paper concerns 50 patients with progressive metastatic breast carcinoma who were treated with weekly bolus injections of doxorubicin (15-20 mg). All patients were followed until disease progression. A partial response with a mean duration of 6 months was achieved in 7 patients (14%). In addition, stabilization of disease was observed in 24 patients (48%) during 2-34 months. The toxicity was generally mild. It is concluded that weekly doxorubicin with fairly low doses is a moderately effective treatment in stage IV breast carcinoma. It is devoid of severe toxicity which makes it useful even in old and debilitated patients.
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