Chinese Clinical Oncology

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Paclitaxel plus cisplatin and fluorouracil(PCF) compared with paclitaxel plus oxaliplatin and capecitabine(POX) as first-line therapy for advanced gastric cancer

CHENG Xianping, HONG Qiaojun, CHEN Mo, WANG Zhanggui.
  

  1. Department of Oncology, Anhui No.2 Provincial Peoples Hospital, Hefei 230041, China
  • Received:2013-03-01 Revised:2013-04-03 Online:2013-06-30 Published:2013-06-30

Abstract: Objective To compare the efficacy and safety of paclitaxel plus cisplatin and fluorouracil(PCF) and paclitaxel plus oxaliplatin and capecitabine(POX) as firstline therapy for advanced gastric cancer(AGC). Methods In this randomized study, 58 patients with AGC were randomly assigned to either paclitaxel 135mg/m2 on day 1 plus cisplatin 20mg/m2 on d1-3 and fluorouracil 500mg/m2 on d1-5 in a 21-day cycle(PCF regimen, n=30) or paclitaxel 135mg/m2on day 1 plus oxaliplatin 100mg/m2 on day 1 and capecitabine 1000mg/m2 twice daily on d1-14 in a 21-day cycle(POX regimen, n=28).
ResultsThe efficacy and toxicity could be assessed among all patients. There were no significant differences in therapeutic efficacy between PCF and POX regimen with respect to response rate(46.7% vs.53.6%), disease control rate(76.7% vs. 85.7%), median progression-free survival(5.8 months vs. 6.5 months) and overall survival(10.2 months vs.11.6 months), respectively. Grade 3/4 neutropenia was more frequent with PCF regimen than POX regimen(30.0% vs. 7.1%), while diarrhea(42.9% vs. 16.7%) and peripheral neuropathy(50.0% vs.23.3%) occurred more frequently with POX regimen. Conclusion PCF and POX regimen had similar efficacy for the firstline treatment of AGC, with different side effects, but acceptable toxicity profiles. POX regimen seemed to be more safe and convenient.

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