Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology
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High-dose administration of anticancer agents is attractive both on theoretic and clinical grounds. Yet, high-dose regimens are usually used as salvage treatments, mainly as a consequence of their considerable hematologic toxicity. One pertinent example is represented by cyclophosphamide, an alkylating agent with a wide spectrum of marked antitumor activity. ⋯ In fact, treated patients experienced less infectious complications (7% v 24%) were eligible to receive chemotherapy earlier (median, by day +14 v day +20 for controls), and fewer required prophylactic platelet transfusions (13% v 43%). Our results show that even very high doses of cyclophosphamide can be administered with improved hematologic toxicity, tolerable morbidity, and reduced supportive care requirements. The increase in the therapeutic index made possible by rhGM-CSF infusion prompts the use of high-dose cyclophosphamide, and possibly of other agents with similar myelotoxic activity, early in the clinical course of chemotherapy-sensitive tumors.