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  • Title: The use of dose-intensified chemotherapy in the treatment of metastatic nonseminomatous testicular germ cell tumors. German Testicular Cancer Study Group.
    Author: Bokemeyer C, Harstrick A, Beyer J, Metzner B, Rüther U, Hartmann JT, Holstein K, Derigs HG, de Wit R, Casper J, Schöffski P, Kührer I, Illiger HJ, Kempf B, Reichle A, Föller A, Hossfeld DK, Fischer JT, Berdel WE, Gerhartz HH, Kirchner H, Pflüger KH, Ostermann H, Kanz L, Schmoll HJ.
    Journal: Semin Oncol; 1998 Apr; 25(2 Suppl 4):24-32; discussion 45-8. PubMed ID: 9578059.
    Abstract:
    With the use of a cisplatin-based chemotherapy, metastatic testicular cancer has become a model for a highly curable malignant disease. Current data show that 70% to 80% of patients with this disease will achieve long-term survival following cisplatin/etoposide/bleomycin therapy. The role of high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell support is being investigated in metastatic germ cell cancer in attempts to improve outcome for patients whose disease relapses after standard-dose chemotherapy and for those who present initially with advanced metastatic disease. Prognostic categories for patients receiving high-dose salvage chemotherapy have recently been developed: cisplatin-refractory disease, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin values greater than 1,000 U/L, and primary mediastinal germ cell tumors are factors characterizing patients who will derive less benefit from high-dose chemotherapy than those with chemosensitive disease at relapse. While standard-dose salvage chemotherapy achieves only a 20% long-term survival rate, high-dose salvage chemotherapy may yield a cure rate of approximately 40%. A randomized study comparing high-dose therapy with conventional-dose therapy (IT94 coordinated by the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplantation) in patients with relapsed disease is ongoing to substantiate this observation. The use of dose-intensive therapy as first-line treatment is currently being studied by several institutions. High-dose therapy may be better tolerated when used first line compared with its use in the salvage situation, and may also achieve a rapid initial cell kill before cytostatic drug resistance develops. The German Testicular Cancer Study Group has developed a sequential high-dose combination regimen of cisplatin/etoposide/ifosfamide given with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and peripheral blood stem cell support for four cycles every 3 weeks. This ongoing study, started in 1990, had accrued 218 patients with advanced testicular germ cell tumors as of June 1997. Of 141 evaluable patients receiving dose levels 1 through 5, 82 (58%) have achieved complete remission with no evidence of disease and 32 (23%) have achieved partial remission with marker normalization. The early death rate was 8%. Overall and event-free survival rates at 2 years are 78% and 73%, respectively, with a projected 5-year overall survival rate of 74%. Despite favorable preliminary results, this approach cannot be considered standard treatment. Currently, high-dose chemotherapy with peripheral blood stem cell transplantation should be administered to patients with testicular cancer only within controlled clinical trials to allow long-term cure rates and treatment-related late side effects to be evaluated.
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