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    Comparative toxicity of cisplatin, carboplatin (CBDCA) and iproplatin (CHIP) in combination with cyclophosphamide in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer.

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    Authors
    Anderson, Heather
    Wagstaff, John
    Crowther, Derek
    Swindell, Ric
    Lind, Michael J
    McGregor, J
    Timms, M
    Brown, D
    Palmer, P
    Affiliation
    CRC Department of Medical Oncology, Christie Hospital, Manchester, U.K.
    Issue Date
    1988-09
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Sixty patients with FIGO stage IIb, IIc, III and IV ovarian cancer were entered into a randomized Phase III study of cyclophosphamide 600 mg/m2 with cisplatin 100 mg/m2, iproplatin 240 mg/m2 or carboplatin 300 mg/m2. Dose modifications were made according to renal function and myelotoxicity. The arms containing carboplatin (CBDCA) and iproplatin (CHIP) were not shown to be significantly different from the cisplatin containing arm with regard to response rate, duration of response and survival. Subjective toxicity showed that cisplatin and cyclophosphamide therapy was associated with more nausea and vomiting (P = 0.0005). The duration of vomiting showed a significant increase with successive courses of chemotherapy for the cisplatin containing arm only (P less than 0.003). The cyclophosphamide/CHIP combination caused significantly more diarrhoea (P less than 0.0006). Alopecia was more severe (P less than 0.02), and neurotoxicity was more common, in patients who received cyclophosphamide and cisplatin (paraesthesiae P = 0.0007, tinnitus P less than 0.00005, deafness P = 0.0018). All three combinations caused cumulative toxicity on haemoglobin (Hb) (P less than 0.001 for each treatment), leukocyte count (WCC) (P less than 0.0005 for each treatment), and platelet count (P less than 0.0005 for each treatment). The degree of fall in Hb for each course of therapy was greater in the cisplatin containing arm compared with the CHIP and CBDCA arms which were not significantly different from each other (P = 0.0005). For WCC the cisplatin/cyclophosphamide regimen was significantly less toxic than CHIP/cyclophosphamide, with CBDCA/cyclophosphamide falling between the two and not being significantly different from either (P = 0.0005). The CHIP containing arm caused more thrombocytopenia than the other arms which were of equal toxicity (P less than 0.0005). Serum creatinine showed a gradual significant overall rise with each course of cisplatin/cyclophosphamide therapy (P less than 0.0005), whereas the CBDCA arm showed no change and the CHIP arm showed a small fall in serum creatinine after most courses of therapy. This study showed that CHIP or CBDCA in combination with cyclophosphamide was less toxic than cisplatin/cyclophosphamide therapy with regard to alopecia, degree and duration of nausea and vomiting, renal toxicity, neurotoxicity and anaemia. The CHIP/cyclophosphamide regimen caused more thrombocytopenia and diarrhoea. The CHIP and CBDCA containing arms caused more leukopenia than the cisplatin containing regimen. Either iproplatin or carboplatin would be an acceptable alternative to cisplatin in chemotherapy regimens, and would result in reduced toxicity.
    Citation
    Comparative toxicity of cisplatin, carboplatin (CBDCA) and iproplatin (CHIP) in combination with cyclophosphamide in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer. 1988, 24 (9):1471-9 Eur J Cancer Clin Oncol
    Journal
    European Journal of Cancer & Clinical Oncology
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10541/116014
    DOI
    10.1016/0277-5379(88)90338-0
    PubMed ID
    3053207
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    ISSN
    0277-5379
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1016/0277-5379(88)90338-0
    Scopus Count
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