Introduction: Cisplatin plus oral vinorelbine, one of the standard treatments for metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), is associated with a high rate of neutropenia, and a hemogram is performed on day 8. We analyzed the oncologists' opinions and the result of the hemogram on day 8 to address the question of whether this hemogram could be avoided.
Materials and methods: Fifty-eight chemotherapy-naive, advanced NSCLC patients were included. Each received intravenous doses of 75 mg/m(2) cisplatin on day 1 plus oral vinorelbine [60 mg/m(2) in the first cycle (80 mg/m(2) in subsequent cycles) on days 1 and 8], every 3 weeks, for a maximum of six cycles.
Results: Out of 257 cycles analyzed, oral vinorelbine was administered on day 8 in 214 (83.2 %) and the dose was canceled in 6 cycles (2.3 %) due to hematological toxicity. On analyzing the patients to whom chemotherapy had been administered on day 8, based on medical opinion without the doctor knowing the hemogram result, we found that the cycle had been administered with a hemogram showing fewer than 1,500 × 10(6) neutrophils in only 3 of the 185 evaluable cycles [event rate of 1.6 %, with confidence interval 95 % = (0.34-4.67 %)].
Conclusion: The hemogram on day 8 can be avoided and oral vinorelbine administered in relative safety in patients with good performance status, when confirmed by the clinician's perception, thereby making this regimen more comfortable for the patient. This is the first prospective study to examine this issue.