Abstract

Data issued from the survival outcome in the ANITA trial are reported according to histology in observation (n=433) and adjuvant chemotherapy arms (n=407). In the ANITA trial, patients with resected stage IB, stage II and stage IIIA NSCLC were randomly assigned to vinorelbine plus cisplatin or to observation. In this retrospective analysis, Kaplan-Meier plots and life tables were used to describe survival within each treatment arm and each histological subgroup: observation adenocarcinoma, observation non-adenocarcinoma, chemotherapy adenocarcinoma, chemotherapy non-adenocarcinoma. In the observation arm, adenocarcinoma appears to be a poor prognostic factor in patients with resected NSCLC with a median survival of 37.3 months and 45.5 months for non-adenocarcinoma. In the treatment arm, adenocarcinoma may be a predictive factor of efficacy for adjuvant chemotherapy with a larger benefit from adjuvant vinorelbine-cisplatin chemotherapy, even though other histological subtypes also benefit from this treatment. The absolute benefit on survival at 5-years of chemotherapy was 13.9% in adenocarcinoma and 5.8% in non-adenocarcinoma. Efficacy of vinorelbine-cisplatin in adjuvant setting is independent from histology. The poor outcome of adenocarcinoma found in the observation arm was reversed by the positive impact of chemotherapy, possibly due to a higher chemosensitivity of this subtype.

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