Phase III study of weekly high-dose infusional fluorouracil plus folinic acid with or without irinotecan in patients with metastatic colorectal cancer

  • C-H Köhne
  • E van Cutsem
  • J Wils
  • C Bokemeyer
  • M El-Serafi
  • M P Lutz
  • M Lorenz
  • P Reichardt
  • H Rückle-Lanz
  • N Frickhofen
  • R Fuchs
  • H-G Mergenthaler
  • T Langenbuch
  • U Vanhoefer
  • P Rougier
  • R Voigtmann
  • L Müller
  • B Genicot
  • O Anak
  • B Nordlinger
  • European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Gastrointestinal Group

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

PURPOSE: To demonstrate that adding irinotecan to a standard weekly schedule of high-dose, infusional fluorouracil (FU) and leucovorin (folinic acid [FA]) can prolong progression-free survival (PFS).

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Four hundred thirty patients with measurable or assessable metastatic colorectal cancer were randomly assigned to receive either FA 500 mg/m(2) as a 2-hour infusion and FU 2.6 g/m(2) by intravenous 24-hour infusion, both administered weekly for 6 weeks, followed by a 2-week rest (Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Internistische Onkologie [AIO] arm, n = 216), or a similar schedule but with FU 2.3 or 2.0 g/m(2) preceded by irinotecan 80 mg/m(2) administered over 30 minutes (experimental group, n = 214).

RESULTS: The median PFS time in the experimental group was 8.5 months (95% CI, 7.6 to 9.9 months) compared with 6.4 months (95% CI, 5.3 to 7.2 months) in the AIO arm (P < .0001). The median overall survival time was increased from 16.9 to 20.1 months (P = .2779). The objective response rate was 62.2% (95% CI, 55.0% to 69.5%) in the experimental group and 34.4% (95% CI, 27.5% to 41.3%) in the AIO arm (P < .0001).

CONCLUSION: The addition of irinotecan to the standard AIO FU/FA regimen was associated with a highly significant improvement in PFS and response rate and was well tolerated. The results of this study confirm that irinotecan in combination with high-dose infusional FU/FA is a reference first-line treatment.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0732-183X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.08.2005
PubMed 15939923