A vast majority of oral cancer patients in developing countries present in an advanced stage with borderline resectable/inoperable stage to busy resource-constrained tertiary cancer centers. Conventional chemotherapy protocols are associated with issues like toxicity, tolerance, cost, and compliance. The present study was conducted to assess the feasibility of low-cost home-based chemotherapy options. Single-arm feasibility study was done in borderline resectable/inoperable oral cancer patients. Home-based oral neoadjuvant chemotherapy consisting of oral methotrexate 15 mg/m once a week and oral celecoxib 200 mg twice daily for 8 weeks was used. RECIST Criteria 1.1 was used to assess response to therapy. The study included 60 patients. The mean age was 51.98 years with male predominance (80%). Fifty-five patients adhered to the treatment; the compliance rate is 91.60%. Affordability (Rs 700 per month) and tolerance to therapy was 100%, and no grade III or IV toxicity was seen. Overall, 18 patients had stable disease (32.73%), partial response was seen in 15 patients (27.27%), and the disease progressed in 22 patients (40%). At the end of 8 weeks, 26 (43.3%) patients were deemed resectable. Neoadjuvant low cost, home-based metronomic chemotherapy using oral methotrexate and celecoxib seems to be a viable option in managing advanced oral cancer in resource-constrained setups.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7960854PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13193-020-01247-8DOI Listing

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