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Objectives of the study:
This randomized multicenter phase II study compares the tolerability, toxicity and quality of life between two high-dose chemotherapy regimens based on cyclophosphamide, thiotepa and carboplatin.
Regimen A: full dose CTC. Regimen B: two courses of CTC (tCTC) with 33% dose reduction.
Primary endpoints are:
Secondary endpoint:
Trial design:
This investigation is a multicenter prospective randomized phase II study. Patients eligible for the study will be identified after mastectomy or wide tumor excision with axillary clearance. Following randomization, all patients will receive four courses of cyclophosphamide, epirubicin and fluorouracil (FEC). Patients with early progressive disease at any time will be taken off study. The first chemotherapy course must be given as soon as possible after the surgical procedure, preferably within 3 weeks, but not later than 6 weeks since primary surgery. After the third or fourth FEC course G-CSF is administered and peripheral stem cells will be harvested. All radiation therapy (including radiation therapy administered as part of a breast conserving strategy) must be postponed until all chemotherapy has been concluded.
Questionnaires, comprising the Rotterdam Symptom Checklist (RSCL) and the Short-Form General Health Survey (SF-36) will be sent by mail before randomization, after chemotherapy, 3 months thereafter, further on every l/2 yr till at least 1 year follow-up as performed earlier. [6, 28, 29].
All patients will be randomized before the initiation of chemotherapy.
Full description
High-dose chemotherapy with the alkylating agent combination CTC appears to add significantly to the efficacy of conventional dose chemotherapy in patients with high-risk breast cancer, provided that the HER-2/neu gene is not amplified in the tumor. As a high-dose chemotherapy regimen, CTC is associated with significant toxicity [31,32]. Although high-dose alkylating therapy seems to be effective, there is virtually nothing known about the dose-response curve for this combination (for a detailed discussion see the classical paper by E. Frei III [32]. If one assumes that the efficacy increase levels off with increasing dose, the efficacy of tCTC might be almost as great as that of CTC, but with considerably less toxicity. In addition, two closely spaced courses of tCTC might further increase the efficacy of the regimen. There are some suggestions that a double transplant may be more effective than a single one, in multiple myeloma and in Ewing sarcoma. A similar suggestion has also been made for breast cancer (study of Nitz et al ref 4, table 1).
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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