4.7 Article

A phase II study of capecitabine and irinotecan in combination with concurrent pelvic radiotherapy (CapIri-RT) as neoadjuvant treatment of locally advanced rectal cancer

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 96, Issue 6, Pages 912-917

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6603645

Keywords

capecitabine; irinotecan; locally advanced rectal cancer; chemoradiotherapy

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We sought to evaluate the efficacy and safety data of a combination regimen using weekly irinotecan in combination with capecitabine and concurrent radiotherapy (CapIri-RT) as neoadjuvant treatment in rectal cancer in a phase-II trial. Patients with rectal cancer clinical stages T3/4 Nx or N+ were recruited to receive irinotecan (50 mg m(-2) weekly) and capecitabine (500 mg m(-2) bid days 1-38) with a concurrent RT dose of 50.4 Gy. Surgery was scheduled 4-6 weeks after the completion of chemoradiation. A total of 36 patients (median age 62 years; m/f: 27: 9) including three patients with local recurrence were enclosed onto the trial. The median distance of the tumour from the anal verge was 5 cm. The main toxicity observed was (NCI-CTC grades 1/2/3/4 (n)): Anaemia 23/9/-/-; leucocytopenia 12/7/7/2, diarrhoea 13/15/4/-, nausea/vomiting 9/10/2/-, and increased activity of transaminases 3/3/1/-. One patient had a reversible episode of ventricular fibrillation during chemoradiation, most probably caused by capecitabine. The relative dose intensity was (median/mean (%)): irinotecan 95/91, capecitabine 100/92). Thirty-four patients underwent surgery (anterior resection n 25; abdomino-perineal resection n 6; Hartmann's procedure n = 3). R0-resection was accomplished in all patients. Two patients died in the postoperative course from septic complications. Pathological complete remission was observed in five out of 34 resected patients (15%), and nine patients showed microfoci of residual tumour (26%). After a median follow- up of 28 months one patient had developed a local recurrence, and five patients distant metastases. Three-year overall survival for all patients with surgery (excluding three patients treated for local relapse or with primary metastatic disease) was 80%. In summary, preoperative chemoradiation with CapIri-RT exhibits promising efficacy whereas showing managable toxicity. The local recurrence and distant failure rates observed after a median 28 months are low compared with standard 5-fluorouracil based therapy.

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