Purpose: The efficacy and toxicity of two-drug therapy (etoposide and cisplatin, EP) in patients with metastatic germ cell tumors were investigated.
Patients and methods: Between December 1996 and November 1999, 18 patients with metastatic germ cell tumors (6 seminomas and 12 non-seminomas, Stage II 8, Stage IIIA 2, Stage IIIB 6, Stage IIIC 2) were treated by 3-5 cycles of induction chemotherapy regimen (EP). Etoposide and cisplatin were administrated in doses of 100 mg/m2 and 20 mg/m2, respectively, on days 1 to 5 and then repeated from day 21. After tumor markers obtained normal levels, one or two additional cycles of EP were continued. Patients showing evidence of residual tumor mass underwent debulking surgery as early as possible.
Results: At the end of EP therapy, 4 (22%) of the 18 patients achieved complete remission and 14 patients (78%) showed partial remission. Seven patients of partial remission were treated by excision of residual abnormalities: 6 had pathologically necrotic debris in the resected specimen and 1 had teratoma, and these 7 patients all achieved complete remission. Four other patients achieving partial remission were followed without surgical excision and have had no evidence of disease progression. Remaining three patients achieving partial remission received salvage chemotherapy with or without adjunctive surgery, resulted in complete remission in 2 patients and partial remission in 1 patient. EP demonstrated to have less treatment-related toxicity compared with that of EBP. Follow up studies ranging from 12 to 47 months (median, 29.6) showed that one patient experienced a relapse from complete remission at 13 months and was salvaged by chemotherapy and surgery. Finally, thirteen patients (72%) who achieved complete remission are alive and disease-free and 5 patients (28%) showing partial remission are alive with negative tumor markers and no evidence of relapse.
Conclusion: These results suggests that EP is an efficacious and less toxic first line regimen for good-prognosis patients with metastatic germ cell tumors.