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Journal of Clinical Oncology 2014-Apr

Randomized phase III trial exploring the use of long-acting release octreotide in the prevention of chemotherapy-induced diarrhea in patients with colorectal cancer: the LARCID trial.

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Paulo M Hoff
Daniel F Saragiotto
Carlos H Barrios
Auro del Giglio
Anelisa K Coutinho
Aline C Andrade
Carolina Dutra
Nora M Forones
Mariangela Correa
Maria do Socorro O Portella

Mots clés

Abstrait

OBJECTIVE

Chemotherapy-induced diarrhea (CID) is a relatively common adverse event in the treatment of patients with colorectal cancer. The LAR for Chemotherapy-Induced Diarrhea (LARCID) trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of long-acting release octreotide (octreotide LAR) for the prevention of CID in this population.

METHODS

Patients with colorectal cancer starting adjuvant or first-line treatment with a chemotherapy combination containing fluorouracil, capecitabine, and/or irinotecan were randomly assigned to receive octreotide LAR 30 mg intramuscularly every 4 weeks (experimental arm) or the physician's treatment of choice in case of diarrhea (control arm).

RESULTS

A total of 139 patients were randomly assigned, most of whom received fluorouracil- and oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy regimens. The rate of diarrhea was 76.1% in the experimental group (n = 68) and 78.9% in the control group (n = 71). Treatment with octreotide LAR did not prevent or reduce the severity of CID. Treatment choices for diarrhea management included loperamide in the majority of patients. No benefit from octreotide LAR was identified in terms of need for diarrhea treatment, opioids, or intravenous hydration or in the rate of hospitalization or quality of life.

CONCLUSIONS

This study could not prove the efficacy of octreotide LAR in the prevention of CID.

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