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Oncology NEWS International. Vol. 12 No. 3 2
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Safe and effective for older women with breast cancer 

Idarubicin Paired With Capecitabine as Entirely Oral First-Line Treatment

March 1, 2003

EDINBURGH—Idarubicin (Idamycin) paired with capecitabine(Drug information on capecitabine) (Xeloda) and administered orally is well tolerated and active as a first-line treatment for older women with breast cancer, according to results of a recent dose-finding study. The oral idarubicin(Drug information on idarubicin)/capecitabine regimen was associated with 8 responses among 16 postmenopausal women who had chemotherapy-naive locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer, according to David Cameron, MD, senior lecturer in oncology at Western General Hospital, University of Edinburgh.

"We were trying to find an entirely oral combination for treatment, and this investigation was really to find the optimum dose," Dr. Cameron said. "We were not looking for how active it was, although we did see responses at every dose level."

Similar Efficacy

Capecitabine has been shown to be at least as effective as paclitaxel(Drug information on paclitaxel) or the regimen of cyclophosphamide(Drug information on cyclophosphamide), methotrexate(Drug information on methotrexate), fluorouracil(Drug information on fluorouracil) (CMF) in advanced breast cancer, according to Dr. Cameron. The oral anthryacline idarubicin is active as a single agent in breast cancer, and has similar efficacy compared with doxorubicin(Drug information on doxorubicin), but with less cardiotoxicity, he added.

Women in the phase I dose-finding study had to be less than 75 years of age; the actual age range was 53 to 75 years. The patients could not have received prior chemotherapy, except for adjuvant CMF completed at least a year earlier. Prior endocrine therapy was also allowed.

Patients received idarubicin on the first 3 days and capecitabine on the first 14 days of a 21-day cycle. Idarubicin was given initially at 10 mg/m2 daily, and capecitabine in divided doses as 1,500, 2,000, or 2,500 mg/m2 per day. The maximum tolerated dose level was idarubicin 10 mg/m2/day and capecitabine 1,250 mg/m2 twice daily. Dose-limiting toxicities included diarrhea and myelotoxicity.

Subsequently, investigators evaluated the 1,000 mg/m2 twice daily dose of capecitabine with a somewhat higher dose of idarubicin (12 mg/m2/day), and found the combination to be tolerable. This dose level is currently being explored in an extended cohort of 12 patients to confirm activity. "This is potentially an active regime that is well tolerated," Dr. Cameron said.

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