Objective: Based upon their individual clinical activity and combined effects in animal models or in vitro, we wished to evaluate a regimen of cisplatin, interferon-alpha, and IL-2 in patients with metastatic melanoma.
Design: Phase II pilot study.
Setting: Referral-based US Government clinical research unit.
Patients: Nine patients with metastatic malignant melanoma.
Intervention: Cisplatin 75-100 mg/m2 was administered intravenously over 30 minutes on days 1 and 8. Interferon-alpha 2a 5 Mu/m2 body surface area (BSA) was given subcutaneously for 4 days beginning 1 day before each dose of cisplatin. Beginning on day 15 and day 22, IL-2 was administered by intravenous continuous infusion at 3 Mu/m2 BSA/d for 96 hours and by daily intravenous bolus concurrent with daily subcutaneous doses of interferon-alpha 2a.
Main outcome measures: Antitumor response and toxicities.
Results: The study was stopped due to renal and hematopoietic toxicity and severe, delayed nausea and vomiting associated with the cisplatin-interferon treatment. Three of 9 patients achieved a partial response (duration 2.5, 4, 14+ months), and an additional patient had a 50% reduction in measurable tumor volume before undergoing resection of residual disease. Overall response rate was 45%.
Conclusion: This regimen was associated with excessive toxicity, and the lack of complete responses in a patient cohort with favorable characteristics for response (good performance status, predominance of skin and lymph node metastatic sites) suggests that it had no advantage over less toxic treatment regimens.
Registration: National Cancer Institute/Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program T89-0137.