Title: Chemotherapy and Why we Leave it to The Oncologists
1Chemotherapy and Why we Leave it to The
Oncologists
- Vanessa Rothholtz, M.D., M.Sc.
- Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck
Surgery - UCI Medical Center
2Introduction
- Describe the cell cycle and the phase that is
affected by chemotherapeutic agents - Classification, Mechanism of Action and Side
Effects of common agents used in the treatment of
squamous cell carcinoma - Definition of the terms induction concurrent
neoadjuvant and adjuvant in relation to
chemotherapy - Role of chemotherapy in the management of head
and neck cancer as a single modality treatment - Role of combination chemotherapy in the
management of head and neck cancer treatment
3Introduction
- Organ preservation VA Larynx Study, Duke
Protocol - Side effects of chemotherapeutic agents used in
treatment of head and neck cancer - Measures that exist to reduce side effects
- Concurrent chemotherapy combined with radiation.
Additional toxicity. - Chemoprevention with Retinoids
- Intra-arterial chemotherapy for head and neck
cancer - New chemotherapeutic agents
4- G1Phase Growth.
- S Phase DNA-synthesis and replication.
- G2 Phase the cell checks that DNA-replication is
completed and prepares for cell division. - M Phase The chromosomes are separated (mitosis,
M) and the cell divides into two daughter cells.
5Chemotherapeutic Agents and the Cell Cycle
From Milas L, Mason KA, Liao Z, Ang KK
Chemoradiotherapy emerging treatment improvement
strategies. Head Neck. 2003 Feb25(2)152-67
6Classification of Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Alkylating Agents Cisplatin, Carboplatin,
Melphalan - Antimetabolites Methotrexate, 5-FU
- Antitumor Antibiotics Doxorubicin, Adriamycin,
Bleomycin, Mitomycin-C, Ifosfamide - Alkaloids Vincristine,Vinblastine, Vinorelbine
- Taxanes Paclitaxel and docetaxel.
- Nucleoside analogues Gemcitabine, Fludarabine,
Cytosine arabinoside - Nitrosoureas BCNU, CCNU
- Topoisomerase inhibitors Topotecan, Etoposide
- Hydroxyurea
7Classification of Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Alkylating Agents
- Substitution reactions, cross-linking reactions
or strand-breaking reactions of DNA. - Alter the information coded in the DNA molecule
resulting in inhibition of or inaccurate DNA
replication with resultant mutation or cell
death.
8Classification of Chemotherapeutic
AgentsAlkylating Agents Mechanism of Cisplatin
/ Carboplatin
- Inorganic metal coordination complex
- Bifunctional alkylating agent binding to DNA to
cause interstrand and intrastrand cross-linking. - Binds to nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins.
- Resistance is believed to develop through
increased metabolic inactivation
9Classification of Chemotherapeutic
AgentsAlkylating Agents Adverse Effects of
Cisplatin / Carboplatin
- Renal dysfunction
- Hematologic toxicity - neutropenia,
thrombocytopenia - Bone Marrow Suppression - acute hemolytic anemia.
- Hypomagnesemia
- Ototoxicity
- Peripheral Neuropathy -neurotoxicity
10Classification of Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Antimetabolites.
- Exerts cytotoxic effects by virtue of structural
or functional similarity to naturally occurring
metabolites involved in nucleic acid synthesis. - Inhibits critical enzymes involved in nucleic
acid synthesis. - Incorporates into the nucleic acid and produces
incorrect codes. - Resulting in inhibition of DNA synthesis and
ultimate cell death.
11Classification of Chemotherapeutic
AgentsAntimetabolites Mechanism of Methotrexate
- Folic acid analog that is S-phase specific
- Binds to the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase, that
blocks the reduction of dihydrofolate to
tetrahydrofolic acid which is necessary for the
synthesis of thymidylic acid and purine. - Interrupts the synthesis of DNA, RNA, and
protein. - Mechanisms for resistance to methotrexate
include - Selection of cells with decreased transport of
methotrexate into cells - Increased dihydrofolate reductase activity.
12Classification of Chemotherapeutic
AgentsAntimetabolites Adverse Effects of
Methotrexate
- Mild stomatitis
- Myelosuppression
- Confluent mucositis
- Pancytopenia
- Liver function abnormalities
- Exfoliative maculopapular rash
- Renal dysfunction
13Classification of Chemotherapeutic
AgentsAntimetabolites Mechanism of
5-Fluorouracil
- Fluorinated pyrimidine similar to uracil
- 5-FU competes for the enzyme thymidylate
synthetase by displacing uracil. - Inhibits the formation of thymidine, an essential
factor in DNA synthesis
14Classification of Chemotherapeutic
AgentsAntimetabolites Adverse Effects of
5-Fluorouracil
- Myelosuppression
- Neutropenia
- Thrombocytopenia occurring at 1 or 2 weeks.
- Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
- Stomatitis
- Alopecia
- Hyperpigmentation
- Maculopapular rash
15Classification of Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Anti-tumor Antibiotics.
- Group of related anti-microbial compounds
produced by Streptomyces species in culture. - Affect the structure and function of nucleic
acids by - Intercalation between DNA base pairs (doxorubicin
- adriamycin) - DNA strand fragmentation (bleomycin)
- Cross-linking of DNA (mitomycin, ifosfamide)
16Classification of Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Alkaloids.
- Bind to free tubulin dimers
- Disrupt the balance between microtubule
polymerization and depolymerization, resulting in
the net dissolution of microtubules, destruction
of the mitotic spindle, and arrest of cells in
metaphase.
17Classification of Chemotherapeutic Agents
- Taxanes.
- Disrupt equilibrium between free tubulin and
microtubules causing stabilization of ordinary
cytoplasmic microtubules and the formation of
abnormal bundles of microtubules.
18Single Agent ChemotherapyCriteria for Response
19Single Agent Chemotherapy
20Induction Chemotherapy
- Chemotherapy before surgery or radiotherapy
- Promotes regression of tumor
- Enhances local-regional therapy via sensitization
- Identifies patients who might be candidates for a
more conservative surgical approach - Treats micrometastatic disease in hopes of
reducing distant failure rates, which can be 40
or greater with conventional local-regional
surgical/radiation approaches - Improves the ability to identify responding
tumors that might benefit from adjuvant
chemotherapy
21Concurrent Chemotherapy
- Used primarily in patients with unresectable
disease to improve local and regional control - Interaction between cytotoxic drugs and radiation
that results in additive or synergistic
enhancement due to - Inhibition of DNA repair
- Redistribution of cells in sensitive phases of
the cell cycle - Promotion of oxygenation of anoxic tissues
22Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy
- The application of chemotherapy prior to any
other anticancer therapy - Provides earlier exposure of potential
micrometastases to chemotherapy than is achieved
with the standard adjuvant approach - Objective response to chemotherapy in the primary
lesion provides important in vivo evidence that
the therapy being used has anti-tumor activity
and suggests that the tumor at remote subclinical
sites will be sensitive as well
23Adjuvant Chemotherapy
- Extension of chemotherapy treatment for patients
who remain at high risk of recurrence after the
primary tumor and all evidence of cancer have
been surgically removed or treated definitively
with radiation.
24Combination Chemotherapy
- Cisplatin and continuous infusion Bleomycin - 71
overall response rate with complete responses
noted in 21 of patients (Wittes, et al.) - Neoadjuvant cisplatin with infusion
5-fluorouracil (5-FU) - 88 overall response rate
with complete response rate of 54 - 120-hour 96-hour infusion 5-fluorouracil
- Three to five cycles two cycles
- Metanalysis by Browman and Cronin found a more
conservative statistic with overall response
rates of cisplatin and 5-FU to be 32, and the
complete response rate ranging from 5 to 15
25ChemoradiationMechanism of Interaction
- Increase in initial radiation damage
- Inhibition of cellular repair
- Cell cycle effects
- Elimination of radioresistant S-phase cells
- Arrest in radiosensitive G2 or M
- Counteracting radioresistance caused by hypoxic
cells - Elimination of hypoxic cells
- Increase in tumor oxygenation through cell loss
- Overcoming accelerated repopulation
26Chemoradiation Trials
- Numerous Trials with
- conflicting / equivocal results
27Organ Preservation
- Hanna et al. - 2004
- Duke Chemoradiation Protocol - 1998
- VA study - 1991
- Efficacy
- Toxic Effects
- Limitations
28Organ PreservationHanna - Demographics
- Ninety-six (76) men
- Thirty-one (24) women
- Average age at diagnosis - 62 years (37-85 years)
- Primary tumor site
- Oropharynx 58 patients (46)
- Larynx 36 patients (28)
- Hypopharynx 20 patients (16)
- Oral cavity 10 patients (8)
- Other 3 patients (2)
- Ninety-one (91) stage III or IV disease
29Organ PreservationHanna - Treatment
- Standard fractionation radiotherapy (total dose
of 66-72 Gy) - At least 2 cycles of cisplatin and fluorouracil
concurrently with radiotherapy. - Of the 127 patients, 44 also received an
additional 2 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy
before starting concurrent chemoradiotherapy - Patients with less than a complete response to
chemoradiotherapy underwent salvage surgery
30Organ PreservationHanna - Outcomes
- Complete response at the primary tumor site - 109
patients (86) - Local disease control - 113 patients (89)
- Organ preservation - 102 patients (80).
- Clinical N disease - 83/127 patients
- Complete clinical response - 57 patients (69)
- N1 - 93
- N2 - 62
- N3 - 47
- Regional disease control - 76/83 (92)
- Distant metastasis - 18 patients (14)
31Organ PreservationHanna - Outcomes
- Disease-specific survival 72
- Overall survival 57
- Severe Side Effects
- Severe (grade 3 or 4) mucositis - 33
- Neutropenia - 25
- Death - 2 patients
32Organ PreservationDuke Protocol
33Organ PreservationDuke Protocol -
Demographics/Treatment
- Stage III/IV and Base of Tongue T2N0
- Chemotherapy (fluorouracil and cisplatin) was
administered at weeks 1 and 6 followed by two
additional cycles of cisplatin and fluorouracil
after the completion of all local therapy, with
the cisplatin again divided into five daily
boluses, and the dose increased in cycle 3 and in
cycle 4.
34Organ PreservationDuke Protocol - Overall
Survival
35Organ PreservationDuke Protocol - Disease Free
Survival
36(No Transcript)
37Organ PreservationDuke Protocol - Randomization?
- Imbalances in the two treatment groups
- More patients with advanced nodal disease (N2 or
N3) in hyperfractionation group than in the
combined-treatment group (63 vs. 45) - More patients with hypopharynx as a primary site
(which is associated with a less favorable
result) in the combined-treatment group and more
patients with oropharynx (tonsil and base of
tongue) as a primary site (which is associated
with a more favorable result) in the
hyperfractionation group
38The VA Study
- Patients Stage III or IV laryngeal SCCA
- Two groups
- Induction chemotherapy (Cisplatin and 5-FU three
cycles) followed by definitive radiation therapy
(6600 to 7600 cGy) - Conventional laryngectomy and post-operative
radiation
39The VA StudyOutcomesCauses of Death According
to Treatment Assignment
40The VA StudyOutcomesPatterns of Tumor
Recurrence According to Treatment Group
41The VA StudyOutcomesSalvage Laryngectomy
- For persistent disease before radiation therapy
or within three months afterward - 29 (48/166) - For later recurrent disease - 7 (11/166)
- Glottic cancers Supraglottic cancers
- Fixed vocal cords Mobile cords
- Gross invasion of cartilage No invasion
- Stage IV cancers Stage III (44 vs. 29)
- T4 smaller primary tumors (56vs. 29)
42Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma
- 147 randomized patients - Stage III or IV
- Radiotherapy alone vs. Cisplatin (100 mg/m2 days
1, 22, and 43) during radiotherapy followed by
adjuvant chemotherapy with cisplatin and 5-FU
(three cycles) - 3-year survival time (78 vs 47)
- Progression-free survival time (69 vs 24)
43Side Effects
- Marked increase in acute toxicity
- Mucositis
- Dermatitis
- Increased risk of infection
- Poor nutritional intake
- Interruption of radiotherapy
- Chemotherapy dose reductions
44Side Effects
45Side Effects Acute Mucositis
46Side EffectsAcute Mucositis
- Long-term dysphagia
- Thick, ropey, copious oropharyngeal
- Secretions interfere with swallowing, cause
gagging and regurgitation, and predispose to
aspiration - The limiting factor
47Side EffectsAcute Mucositis and Dysphagia
- Patients with nasogastric feeding tubes may have
less long-term dysphagia, feeding tube duration,
and need for pharyngoesophageal dilation - Nothing-by-mouth (NPO) intervals as short as 2
weeks have been shown to predict poor swallowing
outcomes
48Side EffectsAcute Mucositis - Treatment
- Polymyxin E, Tobramycine, and Amphotericin B
- Granulocyte macrophage-colony-stimulating factor,
Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor
(GM-CSF/G-CSF) - Oral cooling
- Amifostine - Ethyol - Organic thiophosphate. It
has a higher alkaline phosphatase activity,
higher pH and vascular permeation of normal
tissues - Palmifermin - Recombinant human keratinocyte
growth factor
49Side EffectsAcute Mucositis - Amifostine
- Patients
- Radiation therapy twice daily - 1.6-gray (Gy)
fractions up to a total of 70.4 Gy over 6.5 weeks - Paclitaxel 60 mg/m2 once weekly starting on Day 1
- Number of doses of paclitaxel increased from
three to six - Amifostine - 400 mg/m2 IV on Days 1-5, 8, 29-33,
and 36 - Amifostine Paclitaxel
- Additional dose of treatment (5 vs. 4)
50Side EffectsAcute Mucositis - Palmifermin
- 106 patients - palifermin (60 µg/kg/day)
- Incidence of grade 3 or 4 oral mucositis - 63
- Duration - 3 days (0 to 22)
- Less soreness of mouth, less use of morphine and
TPN - 106 patients - placebo
- Incidence of grade 3 or 4 oral mucositis - 98
- Duration - 9 days (0 to 27)
- Grade 4 oral mucositis - 62
- Adverse events - Rash, pruritus, erythema, mouth
and tongue disorders, and taste alteration
51Side EffectsNeuropathy and Vitamin E
- Thirty-one patients
- Six courses of cumulative cisplatin, paclitaxel,
or both - Group I (n 16) - oral vitamin E at a daily dose
of 600 mg/day during chemotherapy and 3 months
after its cessation - Neurotoxicity - occurred in 4/16 (25) patients
- Group II (n 15) - no supplementation
- Neurotoxicity - occurred in 11/15 (73.3) patients
52Chemoprevention Bioadjuvant Therapy
- Second primary malignancies develop at a rate of
3 to 4 per year in patients who are curatively
treated for an early stage head and neck squamous
cell cancer
53Chemoprevention Retinoids
- Retinoids have been shown to modify genomic
expression at the level of messenger RNA
synthesis and to regulate transcription of
specific genes - Prevent malignant transformation of dysplastic
leukoplakia lesions - Prevent second primary cancers
54Chemoprevention Retinoids
- Retinoid use in Oral Leukoplakia
- Complete response - 10-27 of patients
- Partial response - 54-90 of patients
- Recurrence of leukoplakia at cessation of
treatment - 50 of patients
55Chemoprevention Retinoids - Isotretinoin,
Interferon ?-2a, and Vitamin E
- Stage III and IV - 24 month median follow-up
- Sixteen percent (7/45) patients - died
- Twenty percent (9/45) - progressive disease.
- Second primary tumors
- One episode acute promyelocytic leukemia
- 5-year progression-free survival - 80
- 5-year overall survival - 81.3
- Historical 5-year overall survival for advanced
squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck - 40
56Chemoprevention Retinoids
- Acute toxicity
- Dry conjunctival and oral mucous membranes
- Cheilitis
- Skin desquamation
- Hypertriglyceridemia
- Bone tenderness
- Arthralgias, and myalgias
- Chronic toxicities
- Hepatotoxicity and bone remodeling
- Teratogenicity
57Intra-arterial Chemotherapy
- Principal determinant of a drug's therapeutic
advantage - ratio of total body clearance to
regional exchange rate - Maximum cell kill - when tumor exposure to a high
concentration of drug is optimized
58Intra-arterial Chemotherapy
- Factors to be considered when choosing a drug
- Concentration, not time of exposure
- Drug should be deactivated in the systemic
circulation - High tissue extraction
- No requirement of activation in the liver.
59Intra-arterial Chemotherapy
- Stage III/IV - 213 patients
- Weekly intraarterial infusion of cisplatin,
simultaneous intravenous thiosulfate, and
external beam radiotherapy - Complete tumor response in the primary sites -
80 - Complete tumor response in regional sites - 61
- 5-year survival was 54
- Six treatment-related deaths occurred
60New Trends in Chemotherapy
- Three Drug Regimen Docetaxel, cisplatin, and
fluorouracil induction chemotherapy - Monoclonal Ab against Epidermal Growth Factor
Receptor (Cetuximab) - Intratumoral cisplatin/epinephrine injectable gel
- Farnesyl transferase inhibitors
- Adenovirus-mediated p53 gene therapy (with
docetaxel) - Fas ligand (FasL) gene therapy
- Adenovirus-mediated retinoblastoma (Ad-RB94) gene
therapy
61New Trends in Chemotherapy Three Drug Regimen
Docetaxel, cisplatin, and fluorouracil induction
chemotherapy (three cycles)
- 95 of patients in study were Stage IV
- Biopsy - negative for cancer in 64 patients (89)
and positive in 8 patients (11) - 25 (2/8) patients died of disease in positive
biopsy group vs 4 (3/64) patients in the
negative biopsy group at 2 years follow-up - Overall 2- and 5-year progression-free survival
is currently projected at 85 and 85,
respectively - Overall 2- and 5-year survival, at 95 and 90,
respectively - Pathological complete response rate - 89
62New Trends in ChemotherapyCetuximab - Monoclonal
Ab against Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor
- EGFR expression 90 of specimens
- Two groups
- 213 patients - high-dose radiotherapy alone
- 211 patients - high-dose radiotherapy plus weekly
cetuximab - Locoregional control
- Cetuximab plus radiotherapy - 24.4 months
- Radiotherapy alone - 14.9 months
- Overall survival (over 54 months)
- Cetuximab plus radiotherapy - 49 months
- Radiotherapy alone - 29.3 months
- No effect on distant metastases
63New Trends in ChemotherapyCetuximab - Monoclonal
Ab against Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor
- Authors did not compare the combination of
cetuximab plus radiotherapy with the current
standard of care (platinum-based
chemoradiotherapy) - Authors did not administer the radiotherapy
uniformly among all patients - Survival benefit of cetuximab was evident for
oropharyngeal cancer ( half patients) - No improvement in survival in patients with
hypopharyngeal or laryngeal cancer - Hyperfractionated radiotherapy is effective, but
is associated with a high rate of esophageal
stenosis
64New Trends in ChemotherapyFarnesyltransferase
inhibitors
- 27 oral cavity cancers - ras gene mutation
- Blocking the prenylation of Ras proteins in cell
lines with Ras activated by mutations or receptor
signaling resulted in radiation sensitization of
tumor cells in vitro and in vivo - Combination with paclitaxel - cytotoxic effects
for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma
65New Trends in ChemotherapyGene Therapy
- Adenovirus-mediated p53 gene therapy (with
docetaxel) - Mutations of p53 - 45-70 of head and neck
squamous cell cancer patients - Ad-p53 - induced apoptosis of cancer cells and
reduced tumor growth in mouse xenograft models - Ad-p53 combined with cisplatin, doxorubicin,
5-fluorouracil, methotrexate, or etoposide
inhibited cell proliferation more effectively
than chemotherapy alone - Docetaxel enhanced Ad-p53 transduction and
increased expression of exogenous p53 gene
transfer, apoptosis, and antitumor mechanisms
66New Trends in Chemotherapy Gene therapy
- Adenovirus-mediated retinoblastoma (Ad-RB94) gene
therapy - Reduction in tumor size
- Cell cycle arrest in the G2-M phase and increased
levels of apoptosis occurred in tumor cells
treated with Ad-RB94 - Telomerase activity decreased significantly
- Good candidate for adjuvant therapy with
radiation or chemotherapy, as tumor cells are
most sensitive to radiation or cytotoxic drug in
this cell cycle phase.
67Conclusion
- Chemotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer has numerous
diverse options - Many new therapies are in development
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