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Journal Article

Citation

Jonasch E, Kumar UN, Linette GP, Hodi FS, Soiffer RJ, Ryan BF, Sober AJ, Mihm MC, Tsao H, Langley RG, Cosimi BA, Gadd MA, Tanabe KK, Souba W, Haynes HA, Barnhill R, Osteen R, Haluska FG. Cancer journal (Sudbury, Mass.) 2000; 6(3): 139-145.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10882328

Abstract

We performed an analysis of toxicity and survival in stage III melanoma patients receiving adjuvant interferon alfa-2b (IFN). This was a retrospective single-arm analysis of 40 patients with stage III melanoma who received (IFN) administered at maximum tolerated doses of 20 mU/m2/day intravenously (i.v.) for 1 month and 10 mU/m2 three times per week subcutaneously (s.c.) for 48 weeks. Toxicity in our series is comparable to that experienced in the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) 1684 trial, except for higher rates of dose-limiting myelosuppression and hepatotoxicity. All 40 patients experienced constitutional symptoms, but only 14/40 (35%) experienced grade 3 to 4 symptoms. Of the 40 patients, 36 (90%) experienced neurologic symptoms, but only seven (17.5%) experienced grade 3 to 4 neurotoxicity. Two patients stopped treatment because of severe psychiatric symptoms; one patient attempted suicide, and a psychosis developed in another. Thirty-nine (97.5%) patients experienced myelosuppression; 31 (77.5%) developing grade 3 to 4 myelosuppression. Hepatotoxicity was evident in 39 (97.5%) patients, and 26 (65%) experienced grade 3 to 4 hepatotoxicity. Three patients (7.5%) experienced mild renal toxicity. At a median follow-up of 27 months from initiation of therapy, there have been 19 relapses (47.5% disease-free survival [DFS]) and 10 deaths (75% OS) resulting from progression of disease. The DFS compares with the treatment arm in ECOG 1684 at 27 months, but overall survival is higher in our series of patients at the same time point. In a single program setting, IFN can be administered with similar side effects and outcome profiles seen in multi-institutional studies. Modifications in the induction regimen resulted in notably higher hematologic and hepatic toxicities but did not preclude administering further therapy and did not result in increased attrition rate among patients: only nine patients (22.5%) had their treatment stopped as a result of IFN-related toxicity. In comparison, 26% of patients had to have their treatment discontinued because of toxicity in ECOG 1684.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Risk Factors; Adult; Female; Male; Middle Aged; Retrospective Studies; Time Factors; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Clinical Trials as Topic; Recombinant Proteins; Disease-Free Survival; Lymphatic Metastasis; *Chemotherapy, Adjuvant; Antineoplastic Agents/adverse effects/*therapeutic use/toxicity; Head and Neck Neoplasms/drug therapy/mortality; Interferon alpha-2; Interferon-alpha/adverse effects/*therapeutic use/toxicity; Melanoma/*drug therapy/mortality; Skin Neoplasms/drug therapy/mortality

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