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1 "Jung-Eun Mok"
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Original Article
A Preliminary Results of a Randomized Trial Comparing Monthly 5-flourouracil and Cisplatin to Weekly Cisplatin Alone Combined with Concurrent Radiotherapy for Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer
Young Seok Kim, Seong Soo Shin, Eun Kyung Choi, Jong Hoon Kim, Seung Do Ahn, Sang-wook Lee, Heon-Jin Park, Young-Tak Kim, Jung-Eun Mok, Joo-Hyun Nam
Cancer Res Treat. 2005;37(1):37-43.   Published online February 28, 2005
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4143/crt.2005.37.1.37
AbstractAbstract PDFPubReaderePub
Purpose

To determine the superior chemotherapeutic regimen between monthly 5-FU plus cisplatin (FP) and weekly cisplatin alone in concurrent chemoradiotherapy for locally advanced cervical cancer, the compliance of treatment, response, survival and toxicities were analyzed between the two arms.

Materials and Methods

Between March 1998 and December 2001, 61 patients with locally advanced cervical cancer (stage IIB through IVA) and negative para-aortic lymph nodes were randomly assigned to either 'monthly FP' (arm I, n=34) or 'weekly cisplatin' (arm II, n=27) with concurrent radiotherapy. The patients of arm I received FP (5-FU 1,000 mg/m2/day + cisplatin 20 mg/m2/day, for 5 days, for 3 cycles at 4 week intervals) and those of arm II received cisplatin (30 mg/m2/day, for 6 cycles at 1 week intervals) with concurrent radiotherapy. The radiotherapy consisted of 41.4~50.4 Gy external beam irradiation in 23~28 fractions to the whole pelvis, with high dose rate brachytherapy delivering a dose of 30~35 Gy in 6~7 fractions to point A. During the brachytherapy, a parametrial boost was delivered. The median follow-up period for survivors was 44 months.

Results

The compliance of treatment in monthly FP weekly cisplatin arms were 62 and 81%, respectively. The complete response rates at 3 months were 96 and 88% in arms I and II, respectively. The 4-year overall survival and disease free survival rates were 64 and 54% in the arm I and 77 and 66% in the arm II, respectively. The incidence of hematologic toxicity more than grade 2 was 29% in the arm I and 15% in the arm II. Only one patient in arm I experienced grade 3 gastrointestinal toxicity. No severe genitourinary toxicity was observed.

Conclusion

No significant difference was observed in the compliance, responses, survival rates and acute toxicities between the two treatment arms. More patients and further follow up will be required.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • American Brachytherapy Task Group Report: A pooled analysis of clinical outcomes for high-dose-rate brachytherapy for cervical cancer
    Jyoti Mayadev, Akila Viswanathan, Yu Liu, Chin-Shang Li, Kevin Albuquerque, Antonio L. Damato, Sushil Beriwal, Beth Erickson
    Brachytherapy.2017; 16(1): 22.     CrossRef
  • Concurrent Weekly Cisplatin Versus Triweekly Cisplatin with Radiotherapy in the Treatment of Cervical Cancer: A Meta-analysis Result
    Yan Hu, Zhi-Qiang Cai, Xiao-Yan Su
    Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention.2012; 13(9): 4301.     CrossRef
  • Laparoscopy-Assisted Intracavitary Radiotherapy Tandem Placement for Patients With Cervical Cancer
    Myong Cheol Lim, Dae Chul Jung, Joo-Young Kim, Sang-Yoon Park
    International Journal of Gynecological Cancer.2009; 19(6): 1125.     CrossRef
  • Adoptive Transfer of Human Papillomavirus E7-specific CTL Enhances Tumor Chemoresponse Through the Perforin/Granzyme-mediated Pathway
    Jeong-Im Sin, Jung-Min Kim, Sung Hwa Bae, In Hee Lee, Jong Sup Park, Hun Mo Ryoo
    Molecular Therapy.2009; 17(5): 906.     CrossRef
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