Abstract

ObjectivesAdjuvant cisplatin-based chemotherapy is recommended for routine use in patients with Stage IIA, IIB or IIIA non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) after complete resection. Results obtained for Stage IB were not conclusive. While vinorelbine plus cisplatin is the preferred choice after resection, combining vinorelbine with carboplatin promises improved compliance and delivery of drugs due to lower toxicity. We evaluated the impact of this option on treatment compliance and survival under real-world conditions.Material and methodsA prospective, single-arm, multicenter, non-interventional study evaluated the tolerability, dose intensity and survival resulting from adjuvant use of intravenous carboplatin (AUC 5 on day 1) with vinorelbine administered both intravenously (25 mg/m2 on day 1) and orally (60 mg/m2 on day 8) within four cycles of 21 days each. A total of 74 patients with a median age of 64 years were observed.ResultsThe mean number of accomplished cycles was 3.78, and 62 patients (83.7%) completed all four planned cycles. Relative dose intensity for carboplatin was 88.9%, for intravenous vinorelbine 93.1%, and for oral vinorelbine 83.2%. Median follow-up was 4.73 years. Median disease-specific survival (DSS) was 7.63 years, median overall survival (OS) was 5.90 years, median disease-free survival (DFS0) was 4.43 years, and five-year survival was 56.2%. TNM stage of disease significantly affected DSS and OS. Favorable survival was observed in females, nonsmokers, patients aged over 65 years, patient with prior lobectomy, patients with tumor of squamous histology, and those who finished the planned therapy, but the differences were non-significant.ConclusionAdjuvant carboplatin with vinorelbine switched from intravenous to oral administration was shown to be a favorable regimen with regard to tolerability and safety. Compliance to therapy was high, and survival parameters were promising, showing that applied regimen can be another potential option for adjuvant chemotherapy in patients with NSCLC.

Highlights

  • Lung carcinoma is the leading cause of cancer deaths

  • Favorable survival was observed in females, nonsmokers, patients aged over 65 years, patient with prior

  • Adjuvant carboplatin with vinorelbine switched from intravenous to oral administration was shown to be a favorable regimen with regard to tolerability and safety

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Summary

Introduction

Lung carcinoma is the leading cause of cancer deaths. Radical surgery of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is an optimal solution with favorable survival outcomes. Five-year survival after resection in patients with Stage I NSCLC is 50%, 46% in Stage IIA and 36% in Stage IIB It drops to 24% in Stage IIIA [2,3]. Adjuvant CDDP-based chemotherapy is recommended for routine use in patients with Stage IIA, IIB and IIIA NSCLC after complete resection. As shown in the LACE meta-analysis, vinorelbine with CDDP is a preferable regimen in treating NSCLC after surgery [10]. The favorable results for use of CDDP in adjuvant therapy were further supported by two other meta-analyses with absolute five-year survival gains of 4% [11,12]. It is advisable that the choice between CDDP or CBDCA in the adjuvant setting involves dialogue between the physician and patient with respect to the patient’s preference, anticipated outcomes and risk of poor tolerability. The evidence from a real-world setting involving patients’ options between CDDP and CBDCA combined with vinorelbine is missing

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