Chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil, cisplatin and streptozocin for neuroendocrine tumours

Nicholas C. Turner(The Royal Free Hospital), Sandra J. Strauss(The Royal Free Hospital), Debashis Sarker(The Royal Free Hospital), Roopinder Gillmore(University College London), Amy A. Kirkwood(Cancer Research UK), A. Hackshaw(Cancer Research UK), Anthie Papadopoulou(University College London), J.L. Bell(University College London), Irfan Kayani(University College London), Christos Toumpanakis(The Royal Free Hospital), Federica Grillo(Roland Hill (United Kingdom)), A Mayer(The Royal Free Hospital), Daniel Hochhauser(The Royal Free Hospital), Richard H. J. Beǵent(University College London), Martyn Caplin(University College London), Tim Meyer(The Royal Free Hospital)
British Journal of Cancer
March 1, 2010
Cited by 194Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The role of chemotherapy for neuroendocrine tumours remains controversial and there is no standard regimen. METHOD: We report the outcome for a consecutive series of chemonaive patients with metastatic or locally advanced neuroendocrine tumours treated with a combination of 5-fluorouracil (500 mg m(-2)), cisplatin (70 mg m(-2)) and streptozocin (1000 mg m(-2)) (FCiSt) administered three weekly for up to six cycles. Patients were assessed for radiological response, toxicity and survival. RESULTS: In the 79 patients assessable for response, treatment with FCiSt was associated with an overall response rate of 33% (38% for pancreatic primary sites and 25% for non-pancreatic primary sites). Stable disease occurred in a further 51%, with progression in 16%. The median time to progression was 9.1 months and median overall survival was 31.5 months. The most common grade 3-4 toxicity was neutropaenia (28% patients) but grade 3-4 infection was rare (7%). The most frequent non-haematological grade 3-4 toxicity was nausea and vomiting (17%). Prognostic factors included Ki-67, mitotic index, grade and chromogranin A, whereas response to chemotherapy was predicted by mitotic index, grade and alpha-fetoprotein. CONCLUSIONS: FCiSt is an effective regimen for neuroendocrine tumours with an acceptable toxicity profile. Grade and mitotic index are the best predictors of response.


Related Papers