Split-course accelerated radiation therapy combined with carboplatin and 5-fluorouracil for palliation of metastatic or unresectable carcinoma of the esophagus.

Publication/Presentation Date

1-15-1995

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with metastatic or unresectable carcinoma of the esophagus have poor survival, but often require palliation of dysphagia.

METHODS: Twenty-seven patients with unresectable carcinoma of the esophagus were treated with carboplatin, 5-fluorouracil, and split-course accelerated radiation therapy. Seventy-four percent of patients had adenocarcinoma, and 26% had squamous cell carcinoma.

RESULTS: The regimen was well tolerated; 25% of the patients had disease improvement after completing therapy, although the majority of these patients had all of their disease within the radiation field. Ninety-three percent (13/14) of the patients who experienced disease progression during therapy progressed in areas treated with chemotherapy alone. Median survival was 6 months. Fifty-nine percent of the 17 patients who presented with dysphagia achieved durable relief of that symptom.

CONCLUSIONS: Carboplatin and 5-fluorouracil have low activity in patients with metastatic esophageal cancer. However, in combination with radiation therapy, this regimen is tolerable when the primary goal is palliation of dysphagia near the end of life. Future studies should focus on identifying more active regimens with response and survival as endpoints.

Volume

75

Issue

2

First Page

435

Last Page

439

ISSN

0008-543X

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

7529127

Department(s)

Department of Medicine

Document Type

Article

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