Purpose: A pilot study was performed to evaluate the tolerance and efficacy of a hepatic arterial infusion (HAI) of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and folinic acid (FA) in patients with unresectable liver metastases from colorectal carcinoma.
Patients and methods: In 11 patients, 135 applications of high-dose HAI of 5-FU/FA were administered. All patients had been intra-arterially pretreated, and 2 of them had received an additional intravenous therapy. The chemotherapy regimen consisted of a weekly HAI of FA 500 mg/m2 over 1 h, immediately followed by HAI of 5-FU over 24 h. Four patients received a 5-FU starting dose of 2,000 mg/m2 and 7 patients of 2,400 mg/m2. One course consisted of 12 weekly applications interrupted by 1 week after 6 applications and 4 weeks after 12 applications.
Results: The applied regimen caused only mild side effects. Nausea and vomiting were the most frequently side effects with 36 episodes out of 135 applications (WHO grade > or = 3: 2 episodes). Diarrhea was a minor problem occurring with 8 episodes (WHO grade > or = 3: 1 episode). There was no evidence of myelosuppression, hand-foot syndrome, neurotoxicity, and biliary sclerosis. A partial remission was observed in 3 patients, and a disease stabilization in 2 patients while the disease progressed in 6 patients under high-dose HAI of 5-FU/FA.
Conclusion: The present pilot study demonstrates that the weekly high-dose HAI of 5-FU/FA is well tolerated and associated with very mild toxicity. Because of the encouraging response rate in patients, whose disease progressed under the conventional intra-arterial therapy either with 5-FU/FA or 5-fluorodeoxyuridine, this regimen seems to be an effective second-line treatment and should be evaluated in nonpretreated patients in a phase II study.