Background: Paclitaxel (PAC) is one of the major anti-cancer drugs, effective in different tumors. Studies with 24-hour infusion with 135 mg/m2 and a three-hour infusion with 175 mg/m2 showed a significant schedule-dependent toxicity. We evaluated a one-hour infusion schedule within a phase I study to determine the dose limiting toxicity (DLT), the maximum tolerated dose (MTD), and the anti-cancer efficacy.
Patients and methods: Patients with advanced malignant tumors were treated within cohorts by one-hour infusional paclitaxel starting with 150 mg/m2 and stepwise escalation with 25 mg/m2 increments. Therapy was repeated in three-week intervals. Cycles were repeated until progression. Toxicity was closely monitored, anti-cancer efficacy was only evaluated in those patients who received at minimum two treatment cycles.
Results: Thirty-four patients entered the study (11 NSCLC, five SCLC, seven ovarian cancer, one cervix cancer, nine MBC, one HN cancer). The MTD was PAC 250 mg/m2. The DLT was central and peripheral neuropathy (WHO grade 3). Other significant toxicities were fatigue, myalgia/arthralgia and paraesthesia. No significant myelotoxicity was observed. Totally twentyone patients were evaluable for response. A partial response was observed in five (24%) patients (two NSCLC, two ovarian cancer, one head and neck cancer). Three (14%) patients had stable disease and in 13 (62%) patients progressive disease was observed.
Conclusions: Paclitaxel 225 mg/m2 on day 1 administered as one-hour infusion and repeated every three weeks can be given safely, featured no relevant myelotoxicity, and is the recommended dose for phase II studies.