Published in:
01-11-2018 | Original Article
A randomized phase II study evaluating pyridoxine for the prevention of hand–foot syndrome associated with capecitabine therapy for advanced or metastatic breast cancer
Authors:
Tatsuya Toyama, Akiyo Yoshimura, Takako Hayashi, Naomi Kobayashi, Kanako Saito, Michiko Tsuneizumi, Masataka Sawaki, Masaya Hattori, Takumi Nakada, Isao Yokota, Hiroji Iwata
Published in:
Breast Cancer
|
Issue 6/2018
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Abstract
Background
Pyridoxine, an activated form of vitamin B6 used to treat allergic dermatitis, may prevent capecitabine-associated hand–foot syndrome (HFS), although evidence of the benefit of prophylactic pyridoxine is lacking. The aim of this open-label, multicenter, randomized phase II study was to determine whether prophylactic pyridoxine could delay the onset of capecitabine-induced HFS in patients with advanced or metastatic breast cancer.
Methods
Patients received either concomitant pyridoxine (60 mg per day; pyridoxine group), or no pyridoxine but treatment with capecitabine-containing regimens (no pyridoxine group). Study treatment was administered until the development of grade 2 or worse HFS or disease progression. The primary endpoint was the time to onset of grade 2 or worse HFS from the start of protocol treatment.
Results
A total of 135 patients were randomized to the pyridoxine (n = 67) or no pyridoxine (n = 68) groups. Grade 2 or worse HFS developed in 19 of 66 patients (28.8%) versus 21 of 67 patients (31.3%) in the pyridoxine and no pyridoxine groups, respectively. The median time to onset of grade 2 or worse HFS was 13.6 and 10.6 months in the pyridoxine and no pyridoxine groups, respectively [hazard ratio = 0.75 (80% confidence interval 0.50–1.13), one-sided P = 0.18].
Conclusions
Prophylactic pyridoxine was not shown to have an effect on the onset of capecitabine-associated HFS in this study.