Background: Advanced pancreatic cancer is a rapidly fatal disease whose course has been little influenced by chemotherapy. Earlier studies have shown some modest promise for the combination of protracted infusional 5-fluorouracil (PIF) and cisplatin. We sought to evaluate a regimen of possibly lesser toxicity, PIF plus weekly carboplatin.
Patients and methods: Fifty-four patients with advanced adenocarcinoma of the pancreas were treated with a regimen of protracted infusional fluorouracil 300 mg/m2/day for 70 days and carboplatin 100 mg/m2/weekly on weeks 1 through 10 of a 12-week cycle. After a two-week rest, cycles were repeated until progression.
Results: Median duration on treatment was 82 days (range 4-490 days). Toxicity was mild. Grade 3-4 toxicities were anemia 11%, leukopenia 6%, thrombocytopenia 2%, nausea/ vomiting 7%, diarrhea 9%, mucositis 9%, and renal 2%. Response was evaluable in 47 patients. There were two complete and seven partial responses (17% overall objective response rate among all patients). Stable disease for greater than 12 weeks was seen in 19 patients (40%) and progression in 19 (40%). The median overall survival was 22 weeks (1-99), with 61 weeks median survival in responders (22-99). One-year survival was 13%.
Conclusions: Response and survival results with this regimen are at least equal to the best combination regimens reported, and were obtained with a low overall rate of serious toxicity.