Treatment for metastatic penile cancer after first-line chemotherapy failure: Analysis of response and survival outcomes - Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To retrospectively estimate the efficacy of various treatments used in men with metastatic penile cancer that progresses after first-line chemotherapy.

METHODS: Patients were from a 30-patient cohort with stage TxN2-3M0 penile squamous cell carcinoma treated with neoadjuvant paclitaxel, ifosfamide, and cisplatin chemotherapy before planned lymphadenectomy. Nineteen patients (63.3%) had tumor progression or recurrence, and we evaluated the response to subsequent treatment and survival.

RESULTS: Seventeen had received ≥1 salvage therapies; their median survival from first treatment failure was 5.7 months (range, 1.4-30.3 months). Four patients underwent salvage surgery, all of whom experienced further disease progression within 2 months. Four patients received chemoradiotherapy, 1 with stable disease for 13.5 months and 3 with no apparent benefit. Two of 5 evaluable patients (40%) who had received bleomycin, methotrexate, and cisplatin had objective responses (1 complete, 1 partial) but 1 developed fatal pneumonitis. There were no other documented responses to systemic therapy. Median overall survival was 5.6 months for patients who had received a second cisplatin-based treatment at any time and 4.3 months for those who had not (P = .4).

CONCLUSION: Patients whose metastatic penile carcinoma progresses through or recurs after front-line cisplatin-based chemotherapy experience poor responses to the described salvage treatments, with a median overall survival time of < 6 months. Emphasis should be placed on clinical trials for development of effective therapy in this setting.

Written by:
Wang J, Pettaway CA, Pagliaro LC.   Are you the author?
Department of Genitourinary Medical Oncology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; Department of Urology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX.  

Reference: Urology. 2015 Mar 24. pii: S0090-4295(15)00094-1.
doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2014.12.049


PubMed Abstract
PMID: 25819619

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