Role of chemotherapy in head and neck cancer: Systemic use of single agents and combinations in advanced disease
β Scribed by Muggia, Franco M. ;Rozencweig, Marcel ;Louie, Arthur E.
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1980
- Weight
- 982 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-6403
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Chemotherapy of head and neck cancer has recently been receiving increasing attention as a treatment modality. The basis for this interest has been the availability of at least three agents with reproducible antitumor activity: methotrexate, bleomycin, and cisplatinum (diamminedichloroplatinum). These agents alone or in combination have been demonstrated to be of palliative value in patients whose disease recurs or is too advanced for other therapeutic modalities. Although the multiple drug regimens used have not been curative, their relative effectiveness has raised hopes that, in combination with other modalities, they may lead to improvements in survival and in local control in earlier stages of disease. In addition, as a result of multimodality approaches, it is hoped that it may be possible to identify the role of chemotherapy and specific agents in the treatment of various sites of origin of these tumors. The interaction of chemotherapy and radiationβand the use of intraarterial chemotherapyβfall beyond the scope of this review but constitute another important aspect for investigation in the treatment of these malignancies.
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Thirty-one patients with Stage III-IV head and neck squamous cell cancer were treated by three courses of combination chemotherapy using bleomycin, methotrexate, and cisplatin followed by a radical course of radiation and in two cases by surgery. Of 29 evaluable patients, 4 (14%) achieved complete r
Comb in a tio n Ch em o therapy with Cis-Dia m m in e dic h lo ropla tin um , On c o vin , an d Bleo m ycin (COB) in Advanced Head and Neck Cancer Phase I1 MAGID H. AMER, MD, FRCS (ENG.), FRCP(C),\* RONALD M. IZBICKI, DO,\* V. K. VAITKEVICIUS, MD, FACP,t AND MUHYI AL-SARRAF, MD, FRCP(C), FACP\* Twen
## Abstract From July 1979 to January 1983, 20 patients with locally advanced head and neck cancer were treated with a combination of chemotherapy and irradiation with or without surgery. A majority of the patients were in the age range of 45 to 54 years. Eightyβfive percent of the patients were ma