Anthracyclines-paclitaxel combinations in the treatment of breast cancer

Anthracyclines-paclitaxel combinations in the treatment of breast cancer

Annals of Oncology 8: 939-943, 1997. © 1997 Kluwtr Academic Publishers. Primed in the Netherlands. Review Anthracyclines-paclitaxel combinations in t...

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Annals of Oncology 8: 939-943, 1997. © 1997 Kluwtr Academic Publishers. Primed in the Netherlands.

Review Anthracyclines-paclitaxel combinations in the treatment of breast cancer P. F. Conte & A. Gennari Department of Oncology, Division of Medical Oncology, St. Chiara Hospital, Pisa, Italy

Key words: breast cancer, Taxol-anthracycline combination

Introduction

The incorporation of anthracyclines in combination regimens has increased the response rates, remission duration and survival of patients with advanced breast cancer [1], with approximately 20% of the patients still disease-free 10 years after achievement of complete response [2]. Moreover, at least in some trials, in patients with early breast cancer anthracycline-based adjuvant chemotherapy has produced better relapse-free survival and survival than CMF or tamoxifen [3-7]. These data indicate that the prognosis of early and advanced breast cancer can be improved by incorporating the more active drugs in combination regimens. On these premises the activity of paclitaxel has evoked considerable interest: as a single agent it has produced a response rate higher than 50% in chemonaive patients [8] and as high as 20%-30% in patients previously treated with anthracyclines [9, 10]. Doxorubicin-paclitaxel combinations Because of its high level of activity and non-complete cross-resistance, several trials have been performed to evaluate the feasibility and toxic effects of doxorubicin combined with paclitaxel. The early phase I—II studies used paclitaxel by prolonged infusion (24 or 72 hours) with doxorubicin given concomitantly for 72 hours [11], by 48-hour infusion immediately before or after paclitaxel [12] or as an i.v. bolus four hours before or after paclitaxel [13]. With these regimens the dose-limiting toxicities (mucositis, febrile neutropenia, typhlitis) appear at relatively low doses and are schedule-dependent, with doxorubicin followed by paclitaxel being less toxic. Moreover, the overall and complete response rates were lower than expected, suggesting that the cytotoxicity of this combination is subcumulative. Subsequent to these trials, preclinical studies have shown conflicting data on the interactions between doxorubicin and paclitaxel in vitro, with some studies demonstrating sub-cumulative cytotoxicity and

others sequence-dependent synergy [14-17]. Apart from possible cytotoxic interactions, other factors may contribute to the suboptimal activity of this regimen: the non-linear pharmacokinetics of paclitaxel [18], the presence of Cremophor EL which might alter the cytotoxicity of the taxane and the intracellular concentration of anthracycline [19, 20] and the alteration of doxorubicin pharmacokinetics induced by prior or concomitant paclitaxel [12, 21, 22]. Following the demonstration of the safety and activity of paclitaxel given as short infusions [23, 24], European investigators have performed trials using bolus doxorubicin and paclitaxel over three hours. The most relevant findings of these studies were: the lack of sequence-dependent toxicity [25], the high incidence of symptomatic CHF [25, 26] and the striking antitumor activity, with a response rate in the range of 90% and a complete remission rate as high as 24%—41% [25—27]. The antitumor activity and the cardiac effects of this combination suggested the possibility of a therapeutic and toxic enhancement between the two drugs. As for cardiotoxicity, in two studies [25, 26] 13 of 64 patients (20%) developed a CHF; seven of these patients had personal risk factors for cardiopathic disease but only one died because of cardiomyopathy. The cardiotoxic events occurred at median cumulative doxorubicin doses of 392-480 mg/sqm, well below the maximum recommended cumulative doses of 550 mg/sqm [28, 29]. On the basis of these results the maximum cumulative dose of bolus doxorubicin in combination with paclitaxel over three hours should not exceed 360 mg/sqm. The enhanced cardiotoxicity of this combination can be explained by the reduced elimination of doxorubicinol induced by paclitaxel at the hepatic level [30]. It is of interest that when doxorubicin was given 16 hours before paclitaxel no cardiotoxic events occurred [27]; this interval of administration corresponds to the initial and intermediate half-lives of doxorubicin and doxorubicinol [31, 32] Ongoing trials will clarify whether a time interval between administrations of doxorubicin and paclitaxel is necessary and if so, how long it should be, for main-

940 tenance of cytotoxicity and restriction of cardiotoxicity (Table 1). Epirubicin-paclitaxel combinations Apart from schedule-optimization and lower cumulative doses of doxorubicin, the cardiotoxicity of the anthracycline-taxane combination might be reduced by employing a less cardiotoxic analog. Epirubicin seems particularly attractive because of its antitumor activity, which is similar to that of the parent compound, with reduced cardiotoxicity and mucositis [33]. The dose-finding studies of the epirubicin-paclitaxel combination were started when the preliminary data of doxorubicin-paclitaxel were already available, so the investigators administered the taxane as a short infusion and the patients were carefully monitored for potential cardiotoxicity. Some of these studies have been completed and the most striking feature is the lack of cardiac toxicity: only 6% of the patients showed a decline of the left ventricular ejection fraction below 50% and developed a mild congestive heart failure; in particular, only three of our patients experienced a grade 3 cardiotoxicity, the first two at cumulative epirubicin doses of 720 and 1080 mg/sqm, and the third after 540 mg/sqm cumulative epirubicin followed by high-dose chemotherapy [34-37]. The excellent cardiac tolerability of this combination cannot be explained solely on the basis of the lower cardiotoxic effects of epirubicin. Additional explanations could be a better selection of the patients and, at least in two trials [35, 36], the use of low epirubicin doses. However, very recent studies from Gianni et al. [30] and our group [37] have shown that the co-administration of epirubicin and paclitaxel induces an increased glucurunidation of epirubicin, leading to increased urinary elimination and decreased plasma levels of epirubicinol; these secondary alcohol metabolites (doxorubicinol and epirubicinol) have been shown to play an important role in the pathogenesis of cardiac damage [38]. Therefore, the pharmacokinetic interferences of anthracycline-paclitaxel are completely different according to the anthracycline employed, with the doxorubicin-paclitaxel combination showing a potentiation of cardiotoxicity that is not observed with the epirubicin-paclitaxel combinations. The logical question then is: do these pharmacokinetic interferences alter the antitumor activity of the combination? In two trials the overall and the complete response rates were 44%-50% and less than 10%, respectively [35, 36]; in our trial the overall response rate was 84% but the rate of complete remissions was 19% only [37]. These response rates and particularly that of the complete responses are lower than those reported with the doxorubicin-paclitaxel regimens; however, there are profound differences in the characteristics of the patients and in the anthracycline dosages across these studies.

Table 1. Anthracyclines-paclitaxel as first-line therapy in advanced breast cancer: ongoing randomized trials. Study group

Study design

EORTC SWOG Eastern Europe NL, Germany GONO ECOG

A 60 + P 175 vs. A 60 + C 600 A 60 + P 200 vs. A 60 + C 750 A 50 -> 24 hrs - P 220 vs. FAC (500/50/500) A 60 + P 200 vs. E 90 + P 200 E 90 + P 200 vs. E 120 x 4 - . P 250 x 4 P -• A vs. A -• Pvs. A + P

Abbreviations: A - doxorubicin; P - paclitaxel (over 3 hrs); F - 5-FU; C - cyclophosphamide; E - epirubicin. All doses are mg/sqm.

In the doxorubicin-paclitaxel trials 72% of the patients were chemo-naive and most of them had never received any kind of endocrine therapy; by contrast, in the epirubicin-paclitaxel studies 60% of the patients had failed adjuvant chemotherapy which in some cases included anthracyclines, and a significant number of them were pretreated with hormonal therapy for advanced disease. A multivariate analysis has recently demonstrated that these pretreatments have a significant impact on the probability of response [39]. Moreover, in two studies the majority of the patients were treated with epirubicin doses of 50 to 60 mg/sqm [35, 36]. Several randomized trials in early and advanced breast cancer have demonstrated for epirubicin a significant dose-effect relationship up to doses of 90-100 mg/sqm [40-44]. In contrast, in the doxorubicin trials the dose of anthracycline was 60 mg/sqm, which corresponds to the 90 mg/sqm of epirubicin we used in our study. Apart from the patients' characteristics and the dose issue, other data must be analysed to determine whether the co-administration of epirubicin and paclitaxel modifies the cytotoxicity of the two drugs. The pharmacokinetic of paclitaxel when given as a single agent is nonlinear and its pharmacodynamic effects, particularly neutropenia, are non-linearly related to the time that paclitaxel spends above the threshold plasma concentration of 0.05 urn [45]. On the other hand, in our study the severity and duration of neutropenia were not significantly related to the administered dose of paclitaxel or to the time spent above the threshold plasma concentration [37]. Together the pharmacokinetic data and the pharmacodynamic effects indicate that the co-administration of epirubicin with paclitaxel does not compromise the cardiac tolerability of the anthracycline and modifies the relationship between paclitaxel plasma concentration and neutropenia. Therefore, we cannot exclude the possibility that the combination of the two drugs results in sub-additive antitumor activity. To clarify this point, we are presently conducting a randomized trial comparing eight courses of epirubicinpaclitaxel given in combination to four courses of fulldose epirubicin (120 mg/sqm) followed by four courses of paclitaxel (250 mg/sqm over three hours) (Table 1).

941 Even if the question of the 'best schedule' is still open, these studies demonstrate that an anthracycline plus paclitaxel is probabily the most active regimen available in the treatment of advanced breast cancer. Role of anthracycline-paclitaxel in the management of advanced breast cancer ~~ ~ ~~ Outside clinical trials, the biological and economic costs of these regimens must be taken into account when defining their role in the management of breast cancer. Up to now in advanced breast cancer chemotherapy has been mainly given for palliation in patients with hormone-resistant and rapidly progressive visceral disease. However, two recently published papers have reported that approximatively 20% of women with metastatic breast cancer who have achieved a clinical complete remission with standard-dose chemotherapy have survived free of disease for more than five years [2, 46]. Worthy of note is the fact that such prolonged disease-free survivals have never been observed with non-anthracycline-based regimens [47, 48]. Will the complete remissions obtained with anthracycline-paclitaxel be as durable as those achieved with other anthracyclin-based regimens? If so, we should really 'dream the impossible dream' of treating some patients with curative intent [49]. Such a dream could transmute into reality if the role of high-dose chemotherapy with hemopoietic stem cell support is confirmed by ongoing randomized trials. In this setting the epirubicin-paclitaxel combination is of particular interest; in fact this regimen is very effective in mobilizing peripheral blood progenitors [50], and patients can be treated with 6 courses of induction epirubicin-paclitaxel followed by a myeloablative course of thiotepa-melphalan with good cardiac tolerance.

Table 2 Anthracyclines-taxanes as adjuvant chemotherapy: ongoing randomized trials. Study group

Study design

CALGB ECTO (INT Milan)

A (60 vs. 75 vs. 90) C x 4 ± P x 4 Surgery + A x 4 + CMF x 4 vs. Surgery + AP * 4T- C M F M vs. AP x 4 + CMF x 4 + surgery AC x 4 ± P x 4 EP x 4 vs. CEF x 6 E x 6 vs. E x 3 + D x 3

--



-

-

-

NSABP GONO ICCG

Abbreviations. A - doxorubicin; P - paclitaxel (over 3 hrs); F - 5-FU; C - cyclophosphamide; E - epirubicin; D - docetaxel; M - methotrexate.

docetaxel combination also appear very promising [53]. 2) the short infusion of paclitaxel is the preferred one in combination; 3) the short infusion of paclitaxel is still associated with altered pharmacokinetics of doxorubicin and epirubicin that is different for the two drugs. These pharmacokinetic differences may be relevant both in terms of cardiotoxicity and activity; 4) the pharmacokinetic interactions between paclitaxel and other drugs should be considered before planning clinical trials. Acknowledgement Supported in part by a grant from AIRC (Associazione Italiana Ricerca Cancro). References

Future developments In spite of the uncertainty as to possible pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic interactions and the concern about cardiotoxicity, the high activity of anthracyclinepaclitaxel regimens has prompted the investigators to explore their role in the adjuvant setting. Two pilot studies have demonstrated the feasibility of sequential high-dose therapy with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and paclitaxel [51, 52]; however, only randomized trials will ultimately clarify the potential efficacy of anthracycline-paclitaxel regimens as adjuvant therapy (Table 2). Conclusions Available data clearly indicate that: 1) anthracycline-paclitaxel regimens are extremely active; the preliminary results of anthracycline-

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Correspondence to: P. F. Conte, MD U.O. Oncologia Medica Ospedale Santa Chiara Via Roma 67 56100 Pisa Italy