Combination chemotherapy for advanced breast cancer: response and effect on survival

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Abstract

Forty patients with metastatic breast cancer who had received no previous cytotoxic therapy were treated with a combination chemotherapy program CMF (P), which included methotrexate, 60 mg/m2, and 5 fluorouracil, 700 mg/m2, intravenously on the first and eighth days, in addition to cyclophosphamide, 100 mg/m2, and prednisone, 40 mg/m2, by mouth daily from the first to the fourteenth day of a 28 day cycle. Only 2 of 25 patients responded to hormonal therapy or endocrine ablation. Twenty seven of the 40 patients (68%) had a complete response (8 patients) or partial response (19 patients). Lung, soft tissue, and nodal metastases were the most responsive sites. The median duration of antitumor response was 8 months, with a median survival of 18 months for the responding group. The nonresponders had a median survival of 4 months. The toxicity was primarily hematologic and was especially severe in patients with functional liver impairment due to metastatic disease.

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Canellos, G. P., DeVita, V. T., Gold, G. L., Chabner, B. A., Schein, P. S., & Young, R. C. (1976). Combination chemotherapy for advanced breast cancer: response and effect on survival. Annals of Internal Medicine, 84(4), 389–392. https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-84-4-389

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