Background: Symptomatic brain metastases occur in approximately 10-15% of patients suffering from breast cancer and are linked to a clear deterioration of the patient's condition. Although radiotherapy is recommended as a primary therapy, the optimal management remains controversial. To evaluate the role of topotecan as a primary chemotherapy for brain metastases, we performed a pilot study in patients with metastatic breast cancer.
Patients And Methods: 24 patients with newly diagnosed, bidimensionally measurable brain metastases received topotecan, 1.5 mg/m(2) day, 30-min infusion for 5 days every 3 weeks. A total of 93 courses of therapy were administered (range 1-11, median 3 courses per patient). Prior radiotherapy was excluded. Most of the patients had received prior adjuvant or palliative chemotherapy.
Results: 3/24 patients were withdrawn from the study for various reasons, 16/24 patients could be evaluated in terms of their response to therapy; 1 and 5 patients showed complete and partial response to therapy, respectively, and 5 patients had a stable condition. The median time of survival was 6.25 months. Hematologic toxicity was the major side effect, nonhematologic side effects occurred rarely and were tolerable.
Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that primary chemotherapy with topotecan is an effective and well-tolerated treatment for patients with breast cancer and CNS metastases. Based on this pilot study, future clinical protocols should be developed including multimodal treatment strategies (i.e. radiotherapy).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000055088 | DOI Listing |
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