Prospective, randomized clinical trial of two different high dosages of medroxyprogesterone acetate (MAP) in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer

1979 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 593-601 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Pannuti ◽  
A. Martoni ◽  
A.R. Di Marco ◽  
E. Piana ◽  
F. Saccani ◽  
...  
1988 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 825-831 ◽  
Author(s):  
J N Ingle ◽  
D I Twito ◽  
D J Schaid ◽  
S A Cullinan ◽  
J E Krook ◽  
...  

A randomized clinical trial was performed to determine if combination hormonal therapy with tamoxifen (TAM) and fluoxymesterone (FLU) was more efficacious than TAM alone for the treatment of postmenopausal women with metastatic breast cancer. Patients failing TAM could subsequently receive FLU. The dose of both drugs was 10 mg orally twice daily. Objective responses were seen in 50 of 119 TAM patients (42%) and 63 of 119 TAM plus FLU patients (53%) (one-sided P = .05). Time to disease progression distributions were better for TAM plus FLU (median, 350 days v 199 days), but the log rank test only approached statistical significance (one-sided P = .07). Duration of response and survival distributions were similar between the two treatment arms. Toxicities, in terms of androgenic side effects, were greater on the TAM plus FLU regimen. Fifty-two patients are evaluable for response with FLU following TAM and 21 (40%) have achieved a response. We conclude that the advantages in terms of response rate and time to progression observed with TAM plus FLU probably represent a biological effect, but are not of sufficient magnitude to justify the routine clinical use of this combination given the lack of survival advantage and side effects encountered.


1986 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 958-964 ◽  
Author(s):  
J N Ingle ◽  
S J Green ◽  
D L Ahmann ◽  
H J Long ◽  
J H Edmonson ◽  
...  

A randomized clinical trial was performed to compare the efficacy of tamoxifen (TAM) alone with that of TAM plus aminoglutethimide (AG) and hydrocortisone (HC). Patients failing TAM could receive AG and HC. Objective responses to therapy were seen in 21 of 49 TAM patients (43%) and 25 of 51 TAM, AG and HC patients (49%). Time to disease progression and survival distributions were not significantly different between the treatment arms. Toxicity was greater for patients treated with TAM, AG, and HC and the trial was discontinued early for this reason. Twenty-four patients received AG and HC after TAM therapy and three (12%) achieved a response. We conclude that the combination of TAM, AG, and HC is not recommended over TAM alone because toxicity appears to outweigh any potential therapeutic advantage.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (suppl) ◽  
pp. 83-83
Author(s):  
Reza Moghareabed ◽  
Simin Hemati ◽  
Ali Akhavan ◽  
Hamid Emami ◽  
Maryam Farghadani ◽  
...  

83 Background: Breast carcinoma is the second cause of mortality between female cancers and metastasis is the main contributing factor to the mortality in patients with breast cancer. Optimal management for visceral metastatic breast cancer (MBC) remains unknown. In this study we aimed to assess if adding pioglitazone to chemotherapy regimen can improve response in patients with MBC. Methods: This double-blind randomized clinical trial enrolled women 18 years or older with visceral MBC either previously treated with adjuvant therapy or currently are undergoing different lines of endocrine and chemotherapy regimens. The main objective of this study is to compare treatment efficacy in patients with visceral MBC taking chemotherapy plus Pioglitazone (n = 30) versus chemotherapy in addition to placebo (n = 30) over three months. The efficacy evaluated by change in radiologic response defined by the proportion of patients with stable or partial/complete radiologic response to those experienced disease progression based on Revised Recist Guideline ver (1.1). Results: Combination of pioglitazone and chemotherapy led to higher complete radiologic response (7.4% vs.0%) stable disease status (66·7% vs. 53·6%) and lower progression (22·2% vs. 35·7%) rates, however the differences were not statistically significant (P = 0.24). Clinical benefit rate (CBR, proportion of patients with complete response, partial response, or stable disease) was 77.8% in pioglitazone group vs. 64.3% in control group (p = 0.27). Subgroup analysis revealed higher efficacy but not statistically significant among diabetic woman, who had hormone-receptor–positive tumor. Furthermore, patients treated with Taxan +/-Carboplatin agents had significantly higher stable disease status, lower progression rate and higher complete response rate than the placebo group (P = 0·03). Conclusions: This is the first reported randomized clinical trial on the efficacy of pioglitazone in patients with visceral MBC which demonstrated safety and improvement of response in the subgroup of Taxan / Carboplatin chemotherapy regimen. These findings are in agreement with previous results of in vitro preclinical studies. Clinical trial information: IRCT20180124038493N1.


Cancer ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 63 (10) ◽  
pp. 1931-1937 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert F. Marschke ◽  
James N. Ingle ◽  
Daniel J. Schaid ◽  
James E. Krook ◽  
James A. Mailliard ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document