Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 12, 1876-1885, Copyright © 1994 by American Society of Clinical Oncology
Rapidly alternating chemotherapy and hyperfractionated radiotherapy in the management of locally advanced head and neck carcinoma: four-year results of a phase I/II study
S Leyvraz, P Pasche, J Bauer, S Bernasconi and P Monnier
Department of Ear, Nose, and Throat, and Radiotherapy, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausanne, Switzerland.
PURPOSE: Treatment of locally advanced head and neck carcinoma by surgery
and/or radiotherapy is associated with a high recurrence rate, poor
survival, and, often, limitation in speech and swallowing functions.
Because prolonged time of treatment might be detrimental for tumor control,
we designed a study to develop a schedule of alternating radiotherapy and
chemotherapy that should be administered over the shortest period of time
and with the highest dose of radiotherapy as possible. PATIENTS AND
METHODS: Following four successive steps of schedule modifications,
regimens alternating split hyperfractionated radiotherapy (2.0 Gy/d times
three over 30 to 40 days, to a total of 48 Gy to 60 Gy) and chemotherapy
(cisplatin 80 to 100 mg/m2 and fluorouracil 1,000 mg/m2 by continuous
infusion for 3 to 4 days, +/- vindesine 8 mg/m2 for two cycles) were
administered in 91 patients with advanced squamous cell carcinoma of the
head and neck. Adenectomy was performed for residual nodes and major
surgery for progression only. RESULTS: The overall response rate was 95.6%
(95% confidence interval [CI], 89.1 to 98.8), with 69.2% complete and 26.4%
partial responses. Among partial responders, two patients were converted
into complete responders by resection of a residual node. With a median
follow-up duration of 45 months, distant mestastases occurred in 18% and a
second primary tumor in 7.7% of patients. The median overall survival (OS)
and progression-free survival (PFS) durations were 24 months and 17 months,
respectively. At 4 years, the survival rate was 40%. All of the
locoregional recurrences occurred within the first 15 months, in 14% and
73% of the complete and partial responders, respectively. Mucositis was the
dose-limiting toxicity, with a World Health Organization (WHO) grade III
and IV rate of 81% at a 60-Gy dose of radiotherapy, compared with 65% at 48
Gy or 54 Gy, which precluded further dose escalation. Leukopenia was severe
in the first two steps of treatment, with WHO grade IV toxicity occurring
in 41% of patients; however, this decreased to 10% when vindesine was
deleted from the chemotherapy regimen in the last two steps. Late toxicity
in 29% of patients was not different from that expected with radiotherapy
alone. Among patients with resectable tumors, a 64% rate of organ
preservation was obtained. CONCLUSION: We demonstrated that a full dose of
hyperfractionated radiotherapy alternated with chemotherapy over 40 days
could produce high antitumor activity. Mucositis was the dose-limiting
toxicity, but this resolved completely within a median period of 6 weeks.