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Randomized trial of oral cyclophosphamide versus oral cyclophosphamide with celecoxib for recurrent epithelial ovarian, fallopian tube, and primary peritoneal cancer
- Gupta, Rohan;
- Cristea, Mihaela;
- Frankel, Paul;
- Ruel, Christopher;
- Chen, Chen;
- Wang, Yingyu;
- Morgan, Robert;
- Leong, Lucille;
- Chow, Warren;
- Koczywas, Marianna;
- Koehler, Steve;
- Lim, Dean;
- Luu, Thehang;
- Martel, Cynthia;
- McNamara, Mark;
- Somlo, George;
- Twardowski, Przemyslaw;
- Yen, Yun;
- Idorenyi, Amanam;
- Raechelle, Tinsley;
- Carroll, Mary;
- Chung, Vincent
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ctarc.2019.100155Abstract
Background
Oral metronomic chemotherapy, which has low toxicity, has demonstrated promising anti-tumor and anti-angiogenic properties that may lead to prolonged progression-free survival and improved response rates in patients with recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). These effects may be enhanced by the co-administration of anti-angiogenic agents.Methods
We conducted a randomized phase II clinical trial to evaluate the therapeutic benefit of oral metronomic cyclophosphamide (CTX) alone and with the anti-angiogenic drug celecoxib in patients with gynecological malignancies. 52 patients were randomly assigned to two treatments arms: 50 mg oral CTX daily alone (Arm A) or with 400 mg celecoxib twice daily (Arm B). The primary endpoint was response rate. Secondary endpoints included toxicity, time to treatment failure, and overall survival.Results
In Arm A (n = 26), 3 patients (12%) had stable disease >6 months and 1 (4%) had a partial response. In Arm B, 5 (19%) had stable disease >6 months and 1 patient (4%) had a partial response. There were no significant between-group differences in overall survival (9.69 months [95% CI 3.84-13.18] vs. 12.55 months [6.67-17.61]) or in median time to treatment failure (1.84 months [1.68-2.76] vs. 1.92 months [1.64-5.22]). The most common adverse events were nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain.Conclusions
Oral metronomic CTX has activity with no major toxicities in heavily pretreated recurrent gynecological cancers and may be considered in patients with indolent disease. We did not observe any additional benefit of celecoxib treatment, though this may be due to small sample sizes.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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