The role of chemotherapy in the treatment of adult soft tissue sarcomas


Autoria(s): O'Byrne, Kenneth J.; Steward, W. P.
Data(s)

1999

Resumo

Adult soft tissue sarcomas are relatively rare tumours which are curable with radical surgery. Approximately 50% of patients will develop inoperable disease or metastases for which chemotherapy may be inappropriate. Only two cytotoxic agents - doxorubicin and ifosfamide - have activity in > 20% of patients. For both these agents there is evidence of a dose-response relationship. There is currently no good evidence that combination chemotherapy confers a clinical benefit compared with single agents. Outside a clinical trial, standard first-line therapy should be with single agent doxorubicin at a dose intensity ≥ 70 mg2 every 3 weeks. Approximately 25% of patients may be expected to respond to this regimen. There is the suggestion that responses may occur to ifosfamide in patients who progress on doxorubicin. The role of chemotherapy in the adjuvant setting remains uncertain. Several trials have suggested a modest relapse-free and overall survival benefit for the use of post-operative chemotherapy and a recent overview of 14 randomised trials confirms a small though significant benefit. These benefits have to be weighed against the toxicity of chemotherapy. The importance of treating all patients with soft tissue sarcomas in clinical trials is stressed. There is an urgent need to define new active agents to treat this disease.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/65249/

Publicador

S. Karger AG

Relação

DOI:10.1159/000011924

O'Byrne, Kenneth J. & Steward, W. P. (1999) The role of chemotherapy in the treatment of adult soft tissue sarcomas. Oncology, 56(1), pp. 13-23.

Direitos

Copyright 1999 S. Karger AG

Fonte

School of Biomedical Sciences; Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation

Palavras-Chave #Adult #Chemotherapy #Soft tissue sarcomas #alkylating agent #alpha interferon #carboplatin #cisplatin #colony stimulating factor 1 #cyclophosphamide #dacarbazine #dactinomycin #doxorubicin #etoposide #fluorouracil #ifosfamide #methotrexate #muramyl tripeptide #paclitaxel #topotecan #vincristine #vindesine #bone marrow suppression #cancer adjuvant therapy #cancer survival #clinical trial #dose response #drug efficacy #drug toxicity #human #metastasis #priority journal #relapse #review #risk benefit analysis #soft tissue sarcoma #treatment outcome #Antineoplastic Agents #Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols #Humans #Randomized Controlled Trials #Sarcoma
Tipo

Journal Article