Induction chemotherapy with paclitaxel and cisplatin followed by radiotherapy for larynx organ preservation in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer offers moderate late toxicity outcome (DeLOS-I-trial).

Standard

Induction chemotherapy with paclitaxel and cisplatin followed by radiotherapy for larynx organ preservation in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer offers moderate late toxicity outcome (DeLOS-I-trial). / Dietz, Andreas; Rudat, Volker; Dreyhaupt, Jens; Pritsch, Maria; Hoppe, Florian; Hagen, Rudolph; Pfreundner, Leo; Schröder, Ursula; Eckel, Hans; Hess, Markus; Schröder, Michael; Schneider, Petra; Jens, Bünzel; Zenner, Hans P; Werner, Jochen A; Engenhardt-Cabillic, Rita; Vanselow, Bernhard; Plinkert, Peter; Niewald, Marcus; Kuhnt, Thomas; Budach, Wilfried; Flentje, Michael.

In: EUR ARCH OTO-RHINO-L, Vol. 266, No. 8, 8, 2009, p. 1291-1300.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Dietz, A, Rudat, V, Dreyhaupt, J, Pritsch, M, Hoppe, F, Hagen, R, Pfreundner, L, Schröder, U, Eckel, H, Hess, M, Schröder, M, Schneider, P, Jens, B, Zenner, HP, Werner, JA, Engenhardt-Cabillic, R, Vanselow, B, Plinkert, P, Niewald, M, Kuhnt, T, Budach, W & Flentje, M 2009, 'Induction chemotherapy with paclitaxel and cisplatin followed by radiotherapy for larynx organ preservation in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer offers moderate late toxicity outcome (DeLOS-I-trial).', EUR ARCH OTO-RHINO-L, vol. 266, no. 8, 8, pp. 1291-1300. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18972123?dopt=Citation>

APA

Dietz, A., Rudat, V., Dreyhaupt, J., Pritsch, M., Hoppe, F., Hagen, R., Pfreundner, L., Schröder, U., Eckel, H., Hess, M., Schröder, M., Schneider, P., Jens, B., Zenner, H. P., Werner, J. A., Engenhardt-Cabillic, R., Vanselow, B., Plinkert, P., Niewald, M., ... Flentje, M. (2009). Induction chemotherapy with paclitaxel and cisplatin followed by radiotherapy for larynx organ preservation in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer offers moderate late toxicity outcome (DeLOS-I-trial). EUR ARCH OTO-RHINO-L, 266(8), 1291-1300. [8]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18972123?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{0dd9eb28e58f467ca3fb0577c51d842b,
title = "Induction chemotherapy with paclitaxel and cisplatin followed by radiotherapy for larynx organ preservation in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer offers moderate late toxicity outcome (DeLOS-I-trial).",
abstract = "A prospective multicenter phase-II trial (12 centers) was performed by the German larynx organ preservation group (DeLOS) to evaluate the effect of induction chemotherapy (ICHT) with paclitaxel/cisplatin (TP), followed by accelerated-hyperfractionated (concomitant boost) radiotherapy (RT) in responders. The trial was focused on larynx preservation, tumor control, survival, salvage surgery and late toxicity in patients with advanced larynx/hypopharynx carcinoma eligible for total laryngectomy (LE). Seventy-one patients (40 larynx, 87.5% St. III, IV; 31 hypopharynx, 93.4% St. III, IV) were enrolled into the study and treated with ICHT (200 mg/m(2) paclitaxel, 100 mg/m(2) cisplatin; day 1, 22) according to the DeLOS protocol. Patients with complete or partial tumor response proceeded to RT (69.9 Gy in 5.5 weeks). Non-responders received a LE followed by postoperative RT (56-70 Gy in 5.5-7 weeks). The response rate to ICHT for larynx cancer was 69.6% (7.1% complete, 62.5% partial response) and for hypopharyngeal cancer was 84.3% (6.9% complete, 77.4% partial response). Overall survival after 36 months was 60.3% (95% CI, 48.4-72.2%), after 42 months was 56.5% (95% CI, 44.2-68.8%). Laryngectomy-free survival was as follows: after 36 months, 43.0% (95% CI, 30.9-55.0%); after 42 months, 41.3% (95% CI, 29.3-53.3%). Both parameters did not show different outcomes after distinguishing larynx from hypopharynx. LE was indicated in 15 non-responders after ICHT. Five of the 15 non-responders refused the laryngectomy. Two of the five received RT instead and had no evidence of disease 42 months after RT. Late toxicity (dysphagia III, IV LENT SOMA score in laryngectomy-free survivors: after 6 months, 1.8%; 12 months, 11.4%; 18 months, 14.5%; 24 months, 8.1%; 36 months, 16%) and salvage surgery (4 pharyngocutaneous fistulas in 27 operations) were tolerable. In a large portion of patients eligible for LE, the larynx could be preserved with satisfying functional outcome. Good responders after ICHT had also a good general outcome with relatively rare severe late toxicities. Due to a slight increase of relevant late dysphagia, functional outcome regarding swallowing and tracheotomy free breathing should be more focused in future larynx organ preservation trials.",
author = "Andreas Dietz and Volker Rudat and Jens Dreyhaupt and Maria Pritsch and Florian Hoppe and Rudolph Hagen and Leo Pfreundner and Ursula Schr{\"o}der and Hans Eckel and Markus Hess and Michael Schr{\"o}der and Petra Schneider and B{\"u}nzel Jens and Zenner, {Hans P} and Werner, {Jochen A} and Rita Engenhardt-Cabillic and Bernhard Vanselow and Peter Plinkert and Marcus Niewald and Thomas Kuhnt and Wilfried Budach and Michael Flentje",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "266",
pages = "1291--1300",
journal = "EUR ARCH OTO-RHINO-L",
issn = "0937-4477",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Induction chemotherapy with paclitaxel and cisplatin followed by radiotherapy for larynx organ preservation in advanced laryngeal and hypopharyngeal cancer offers moderate late toxicity outcome (DeLOS-I-trial).

AU - Dietz, Andreas

AU - Rudat, Volker

AU - Dreyhaupt, Jens

AU - Pritsch, Maria

AU - Hoppe, Florian

AU - Hagen, Rudolph

AU - Pfreundner, Leo

AU - Schröder, Ursula

AU - Eckel, Hans

AU - Hess, Markus

AU - Schröder, Michael

AU - Schneider, Petra

AU - Jens, Bünzel

AU - Zenner, Hans P

AU - Werner, Jochen A

AU - Engenhardt-Cabillic, Rita

AU - Vanselow, Bernhard

AU - Plinkert, Peter

AU - Niewald, Marcus

AU - Kuhnt, Thomas

AU - Budach, Wilfried

AU - Flentje, Michael

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - A prospective multicenter phase-II trial (12 centers) was performed by the German larynx organ preservation group (DeLOS) to evaluate the effect of induction chemotherapy (ICHT) with paclitaxel/cisplatin (TP), followed by accelerated-hyperfractionated (concomitant boost) radiotherapy (RT) in responders. The trial was focused on larynx preservation, tumor control, survival, salvage surgery and late toxicity in patients with advanced larynx/hypopharynx carcinoma eligible for total laryngectomy (LE). Seventy-one patients (40 larynx, 87.5% St. III, IV; 31 hypopharynx, 93.4% St. III, IV) were enrolled into the study and treated with ICHT (200 mg/m(2) paclitaxel, 100 mg/m(2) cisplatin; day 1, 22) according to the DeLOS protocol. Patients with complete or partial tumor response proceeded to RT (69.9 Gy in 5.5 weeks). Non-responders received a LE followed by postoperative RT (56-70 Gy in 5.5-7 weeks). The response rate to ICHT for larynx cancer was 69.6% (7.1% complete, 62.5% partial response) and for hypopharyngeal cancer was 84.3% (6.9% complete, 77.4% partial response). Overall survival after 36 months was 60.3% (95% CI, 48.4-72.2%), after 42 months was 56.5% (95% CI, 44.2-68.8%). Laryngectomy-free survival was as follows: after 36 months, 43.0% (95% CI, 30.9-55.0%); after 42 months, 41.3% (95% CI, 29.3-53.3%). Both parameters did not show different outcomes after distinguishing larynx from hypopharynx. LE was indicated in 15 non-responders after ICHT. Five of the 15 non-responders refused the laryngectomy. Two of the five received RT instead and had no evidence of disease 42 months after RT. Late toxicity (dysphagia III, IV LENT SOMA score in laryngectomy-free survivors: after 6 months, 1.8%; 12 months, 11.4%; 18 months, 14.5%; 24 months, 8.1%; 36 months, 16%) and salvage surgery (4 pharyngocutaneous fistulas in 27 operations) were tolerable. In a large portion of patients eligible for LE, the larynx could be preserved with satisfying functional outcome. Good responders after ICHT had also a good general outcome with relatively rare severe late toxicities. Due to a slight increase of relevant late dysphagia, functional outcome regarding swallowing and tracheotomy free breathing should be more focused in future larynx organ preservation trials.

AB - A prospective multicenter phase-II trial (12 centers) was performed by the German larynx organ preservation group (DeLOS) to evaluate the effect of induction chemotherapy (ICHT) with paclitaxel/cisplatin (TP), followed by accelerated-hyperfractionated (concomitant boost) radiotherapy (RT) in responders. The trial was focused on larynx preservation, tumor control, survival, salvage surgery and late toxicity in patients with advanced larynx/hypopharynx carcinoma eligible for total laryngectomy (LE). Seventy-one patients (40 larynx, 87.5% St. III, IV; 31 hypopharynx, 93.4% St. III, IV) were enrolled into the study and treated with ICHT (200 mg/m(2) paclitaxel, 100 mg/m(2) cisplatin; day 1, 22) according to the DeLOS protocol. Patients with complete or partial tumor response proceeded to RT (69.9 Gy in 5.5 weeks). Non-responders received a LE followed by postoperative RT (56-70 Gy in 5.5-7 weeks). The response rate to ICHT for larynx cancer was 69.6% (7.1% complete, 62.5% partial response) and for hypopharyngeal cancer was 84.3% (6.9% complete, 77.4% partial response). Overall survival after 36 months was 60.3% (95% CI, 48.4-72.2%), after 42 months was 56.5% (95% CI, 44.2-68.8%). Laryngectomy-free survival was as follows: after 36 months, 43.0% (95% CI, 30.9-55.0%); after 42 months, 41.3% (95% CI, 29.3-53.3%). Both parameters did not show different outcomes after distinguishing larynx from hypopharynx. LE was indicated in 15 non-responders after ICHT. Five of the 15 non-responders refused the laryngectomy. Two of the five received RT instead and had no evidence of disease 42 months after RT. Late toxicity (dysphagia III, IV LENT SOMA score in laryngectomy-free survivors: after 6 months, 1.8%; 12 months, 11.4%; 18 months, 14.5%; 24 months, 8.1%; 36 months, 16%) and salvage surgery (4 pharyngocutaneous fistulas in 27 operations) were tolerable. In a large portion of patients eligible for LE, the larynx could be preserved with satisfying functional outcome. Good responders after ICHT had also a good general outcome with relatively rare severe late toxicities. Due to a slight increase of relevant late dysphagia, functional outcome regarding swallowing and tracheotomy free breathing should be more focused in future larynx organ preservation trials.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 266

SP - 1291

EP - 1300

JO - EUR ARCH OTO-RHINO-L

JF - EUR ARCH OTO-RHINO-L

SN - 0937-4477

IS - 8

M1 - 8

ER -