Author:
Taylor S G,McGuire W P,Hauck W W,Showel J L,Lad T E
Abstract
Forty-seven patients with recurrent or metastatic head and neck squamous cancer were entered into a prospectively controlled study comparing high-dose infusion methotrexate with leucovorin against standard-dose methotrexate without leucovorin. Patients were stratified for prior treatment and hematogenous metastases prior to randomization. Patients received either methotrexate (1,500 mg/m2) infused over 24 hours with leucovorin or 40 mg/m2 intramuscularly. Each treatment was given weekly for the first six weeks and followed a dose escalation schedule to toxicity. After six weeks patients received the high-dose regimen every two weeks and the low-dose schedule continued weekly. One patient was ineligible and four had inadequate follow-up to assess response (less than two weeks). Forty-two patients were evaluable for survival and 37 for response. Six of 19 patients (32%) treated with high-dose infusion responded (one complete response) and four of 18 patients (22%) receiving standard dosage responded (P = .52). Treatment with high-dose methotrexate resulted in an improved duration of disease control over standard dosage with the respective median times to progression of 11 weeks and five weeks (P = .04). These differences were most marked in good performance status patients (P = .007) and those without hematogenous dissemination (P = .02). Toxicity, however, was also significantly worse in the high-dose treatment group (P = .01) and survival was identical between treatments (4.2 months). The authors conclude that any treatment advantage to high-dose methotrexate may be attributable to its greater toxicity rather than to a selective therapeutic effect and this regimen does not result in improved patient survival. Good performance status patients may benefit from more aggressive therapy.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
48 articles.
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