Background: A previous phase II study of doxifluridine in non-elderly patients with advanced gastric cancer demonstrated a favorable survival with mild toxicity, despite a low response rate. The objectives of this study were to evaluate efficacy and feasibility of this agent for elderly patients.
Methods: This study protocol required elderly patients, aged 76-80 years, with advanced gastric cancer and having no prior chemotherapy. Doxifluridine, at a dose of 1400 mg/m(2)/day, was administered for four consecutive days followed by a 10-day rest.
Results: Between October 1994 and March 1998, 18 patients were registered. The study was then closed because of poor accrual. Toxicity was moderate; three patients suffered from grade 3 anemia and one patient each had grade 3 thrombocytopenia, nausea/vomiting and grade 4 diarrhea. There was one partial response, seven with no change and 10 with progressive disease, yielding a response rate of 5.6%. The median progression-free survival and median survival time for the 18 patients were 55 and 164 days, respectively, with a 1-year survival rate of 5.6%.
Conclusions: Although the number of patients was too small to draw any definitive conclusions, this study failed to demonstrate the survival advantage of doxifluridine.