Safety, compliance, and predictive parameters for dosage modification in adjuvant S-1 chemotherapy for gastric canceropen access
- Authors
- Kim, Su-Jung; Kim, Yu Jung; Kim, Jee Hyun; Park, Do Joong; Kim, Hyung-Ho; Lee, Jong Seok; Lee, Keun-Wook
- Issue Date
- Jan-2013
- Publisher
- WILEY-BLACKWELL
- Citation
- CANCER SCIENCE, v.104, no.1, pp 116 - 123
- Pages
- 8
- Journal Title
- CANCER SCIENCE
- Volume
- 104
- Number
- 1
- Start Page
- 116
- End Page
- 123
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/74763
- DOI
- 10.1111/cas.12044
- ISSN
- 1347-9032
1349-7006
- Abstract
- This study was performed to investigate the compliance, safety, dosage modifications (dose reduction and/or schedule change [including permanent S-1 withdrawal]), and clinical parameters that predict S-1 dosage modification in gastric cancer patients receiving adjuvant S-1 chemotherapy. One hundred and forty-nine patients who underwent curative D2 surgery and received adjuvant S-1 chemotherapy were enrolled. S-1 was administered orally (40 mg/m2 twice daily on days 128 every 6 weeks) for 1 year. For patients unable to tolerate S-1, the dosage was reduced or the schedule was changed to a 3-weekly schedule of 2 weeks on treatment followed by 1 week off treatment. The planned 1-year treatment was completed in 73.8% of patients; 69 patients required dosage modification because of toxicity. The most frequent cause of dosage modification was enterocolitis (37 patients; defined as = grade 2 abdominal pain and/or = grade 2 diarrhea). Most dosage modification occurred during the early cycles of treatment (within the first 3 months). Severe toxicities (= grade 3) included neutropenia (13.4%), abdominal pain (8.1%) and diarrhea (8.1%). In multivariate analyses, decreased relative dose intensity was related to poor disease-free survival independent of stage, and only low creatinine clearance predicted S-1 dosage modification. In conclusion, although adjuvant S-1 therapy has a high compliance rate, meticulous monitoring of adverse events is required in the early period of treatment. Decreased creatinine clearance was the only factor that predicted dosage modification. In patients with creatinine clearance <50 mL/min, dosage reduction should be considered from the initiation of S-1 treatment. (Cancer Sci 2013; 104: 123116)
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