CHICAGO-The XELOX regimen,
which combines oral capecitabine(Drug information on capecitabine)
(Xeloda) and oxaliplatin(Drug information on oxaliplatin) (Eloxatin),
was safe and "highly active" in a
phase II study of 35 elderly patients
with advanced colorectal cancer. On
behalf of the Southern Italy Cooperative
Oncology Group, Pasquale
Comella, MD, of the National Tumor
Institute, Naples, presented the study
in a poster at the 39th Annual Meeting
of the American Society of Clinical
Oncology (abstract 2939).
Dr. Comella said that this trial was
launched because preliminary studies
had shown that capecitabine given
orally for 2 days every 3 weeks has
similar activity to and a better toxicity
profile than IV leucovorin-modulated
5-fluorouracil for 5 days (Mayo
regimen) in advanced colorectal cancer.
The XELOX regimen of oxaliplatin
130 mg/m2 combined with
capecitabine 1,000 mg/m2 twice daily
every 3 weeks was safe and highly active.
"This combination could also be
a suitable option for elderly patients,"
Dr. Comella said.
In this phase II trial, patients aged
70 years or more with advanced colorectal
cancer were treated with XELOX
every 3 weeks, using an intrapatient
dose escalation if no grade 2 or
higher toxicity was reported on the
previous cycle. Capecitabine was escalated
from 1,000 to 1,250 mg/m2
twice daily on days 2 to 15. Oxaliplatin
was escalated from 85 to 100 mg/m2
on day 1, with cycles repeating every 3
weeks.
The ASCO presentation included
data for 35 patients, aged 70 to 81
years (median, 75). Eight patients
(23%) had previous treatment with
adjuvant therapy. Nineteen (54%)
were symptomatic, 19 (54%) had two
or more sites of disease, and 14 (40%)
had a previous loss of body weight.
The median number of cycles delivered
was 6 (range, 1 to 12 per patient).
Oxaliplatin was escalated in 18
patients, and mean dose intensity over
3 cycles was 28.7 mg/m2/wk. Capecitabine
was escalated in 4 patients, and
its median dose intensity over 3 cycles
was 8.4 g/m2/wk. The corresponding
median doses over 6 cycles were oxaliplatin
27 mg/m2/wk and capecitabine
7.8 g/m2/wk.
Study Results
"Two complete responses and 11
partial responses were achieved, giving
a 37% response rate according to
intent-to-treat analysis," Dr. Comella
said. Median duration of response was
6.9 months.
There was minor reduction of
tumor mass in five patients, coupled
with a 50% or more reduction of basal
CEA levels in three of the four patients
who had abnormal CEA levels at baseline.
Twelve patients had stable disease
lasting at least 4 months. "Therefore,
at least a temporary control of tumor
growth was reached in 25 patients
(71%)," Dr. Comella said. With a
median follow-up of 10 months, the
1-year probability of survival was
58%, he added.
Severe diarrhea occurred in three
patients (9%), four (11%) developed
grade 3 neuropathies, and mild to
moderate hand-foot syndrome occurred
in three (9%). Dr. Comella
told ONI in an interview that the neuropathies
tended to resolve within 2
weeks and that persistent neuropathy
at the time of the next scheduled 3-
week cycle was "not a big problem." In
some patients, oxaliplatin was stopped
and capecitabine continued as monotherapy
for 3 or 4 months until neuropathy
resolved, but this was not usually
necessary.
The researchers are now testing a
new XELOX regimen, he said, in which
the oxaliplatin dose will be 85 mg/m2
in the first cycle, 110 mg/m2 in cycle 2,
and 130 mg/m2 in cycle 3, while the
capecitabine dose remains at the 1,000
mg/m2 twice daily level.
Dr. Comella told ONI that 15 of the
65 anticipated patients have already
completed three cycles of treatment
and that the trial would likely be complete
in late 2003.
