AI Article Synopsis

  • This observational study aimed to assess the safety of capecitabine-based adjuvant therapy in patients with resected stage III colon cancer in a real-world clinical setting.
  • A total of 1485 patients were observed, with the majority experiencing common side effects like hand-foot syndrome and diarrhea, while serious adverse events were relatively low (6.5%).
  • The study highlighted that 77.9% of patients completed six or more treatment cycles, but it also recognized limitations, such as the lack of efficacy data and unvalidated questionnaires regarding patient expectations and satisfaction.

Article Abstract

Objective: This observational study was conducted to document the safety of capecitabine-based adjuvant therapy in patients with resected colon cancer under routine clinical conditions.

Research And Design Methods: ML20431 was a prospective, multicenter, non-interventional, observational study. It was designed to answer five research questions relating to safety, dosage and administration, and discontinuation from capecitabine-based adjuvant therapy. Patients were required to have R0 resected stage III colon cancer and have started treatment with capecitabine-based adjuvant therapy based on a decision by the investigator. Patients were followed over an observation period of ≤6 months after initiation of therapy. Investigators were required to complete the study case report form at study entry, each treatment cycle, and at the final examination.

Main Outcome Measures: A total of 1485 patients were included in the study, and 1481 patients were treated with capecitabine and formed the analysis population. Most patients had colon cancer (78.3%), followed by rectal cancer (16.4%). Most patients had stage III disease (69.3%); the remaining patients had stage II disease (30.7%). The most common all-grade adverse reactions were hand-foot syndrome (46.9%), diarrhea (34.4%), and hemoglobin decreases (31.5%). Grade 3/4 adverse reactions were infrequent (<4%). Serious adverse events were reported in 96 patients (6.5%). Six or more cycles of treatment were completed by 77.9% of patients. Approximately two-thirds of patients (67.3%) received capecitabine monotherapy and the remainder (32.7%) received capecitabine in combination with ≥1 drugs, most commonly oxaliplatin (460 cases). Discontinuation of capecitabine was documented in 344 patients (23.2%).

Study Limitations: no efficacy data were collected; the questionnaires for patients' expectations and satisfaction were not formally validated; and a few patients (<1.5%) had some retrospective data.

Conclusions: The safety profile of capecitabine-based adjuvant therapy in a broad patient population with colon cancer is similar to that previously documented in phase III clinical trials.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1185/03007995.2015.1014030DOI Listing

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