High-dose chemotherapy as primary treatment for poor-risk germ-cell tumors: The memorial Sloan-Kettering experience (1988-1999)

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Abstract

Although the majority of patients with poor-risk germ-cell tumors (GCTs) will achieve a durable complete remission (CR) with standard first-line therapy, 20% to 30% of them will either relapse or fail to achieve an initial CR and eventually die. For this reason, the strategy of using high-dose (HD) chemotherapy with autologous stem-cell support has been investigated to improve the chances of cure attainable in the salvage setting, but at a cost of significant morbidity and mortality. Treatment using HD therapy in the first-line setting offers the promise of reducing morbidity and mortality while increasing efficacy. At Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC), trials were conducted to test this hypothesis. Patients at high risk of relapse following conventional therapy were identified, based on post- treatment serum marker concentrations that failed to appropriately decline by predicted half-life after several cycles of standard treatment. These patients received first-line HD treatment. Patients received a 2-drug HD regimen in one trial and an intensified 3-drug regimen in another, each with autologous bone marrow transplantation. These patients had improved overall and event-free survival rates (p = 0.001 and 0.003, respectively) compared with historical controls who underwent standard first-line treatment, with a lower incidence of treatment-related mortality than patients who received HD therapy in the salvage setting. Randomized trials are under way to prospectively verify these results.

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APA

Morris, M. J., & Bosl, G. J. (1999). High-dose chemotherapy as primary treatment for poor-risk germ-cell tumors: The memorial Sloan-Kettering experience (1988-1999). In International Journal of Cancer (Vol. 83, pp. 834–838). https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0215(19991210)83:6<834::AID-IJC25>3.0.CO;2-I

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