Objective: The primary aim of this study was to estimate the rate of clinical and pathologic response to preoperative docetaxel, doxorubicin, and infusional 5-fluorouracil in patients with locally advanced breast cancer. Secondary objective included the determination of toxicity profile.
Patients and methods: Thirty-nine patients (median age 49 years) with histologically confirmed locally advanced breast cancer (stage IIIA or IIIB) were studied. Patients received 4 courses of chemotherapy with docetaxel (75 mg/m2 iv over 1 hour), doxorubicin (50 mg/m2 iv bolus), and 5-fluorouracil (300 mg/m2/d as continuous iv infusion on days 1-5). Treatment cycles were repeated every 21 days. Prophylactic filgastrim 5 microg/kg s/c QD was administered to all patients. Definitive surgery was performed after the completion of 4 cycles of therapy. Pathologic complete response was defined as the absence of invasive cancer in both the breast and ipsilateral axillary lymph nodes.
Results: The clinical objective response rate (partial plus complete) was 87% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 76-98%). Three patients (8%) had complete pathologic response. Two patients progressed preoperatively. Thirteen patients (33%) developed neutropenic fever. Fifty-three percent of the patients were hospitalized for treatment related complications. No cardiotoxicity or treatment related deaths were observed.
Conclusions: Triple cytotoxic therapy based on concurrent doxorubicin and docetaxel with infusional 5-flourouracil (5-FU) does not appear to significantly improve the pathologic response in patients with locally advanced breast cancer.