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J Indian Med Assoc ; 1992 Feb; 90(2): 39-42
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-97345

ABSTRACT

Seventy-five female patients suffering from advanced breast cancer were treated with toilet mastectomy, radiotherapy and oophorectomy (if premenopausal) or tamoxifen therapy (if postmenopausal) as well as chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil and prednisone. The most common side-effects of combined chemohormonal therapy were gastro-intestinal (nausea, vomiting, rarely diarrhoea) in 43 patients (57.3%), followed by alopecia in 23 patients (30.6%), myelosuppression in 12 patients (16%), extravasation and thrombophlebitis in 7 patients (9.3%), and mucositis and oral erythema in 3 patients (4%). Side-effects of tamoxifen therapy such as vaginal discharge, bleeding, hot flushes were encountered in 10 patients (13.3%). Hypercalcaemia, tumour flare and hepatic, renal, cardiac, pulmonary and neurological toxicities were not encountered. Improvement of 10-30% in Karnofsky performance status was noted in responders while 20-30% deterioration was observed in non-responders. Combination therapy was mostly well tolerated, side-effects were few and toxicities were temporary and reversible.


Subject(s)
Alopecia/chemically induced , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/adverse effects , Breast Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Combined Modality Therapy , Cyclophosphamide/administration & dosage , Female , Fluorouracil/administration & dosage , Humans , Mastectomy , Methotrexate/administration & dosage , Middle Aged , Nausea/chemically induced , Ovariectomy , Prednisone/administration & dosage , Tamoxifen/administration & dosage , Thrombophlebitis/chemically induced , Vomiting/chemically induced
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