W K Evans, W Kocha, A Gagliardi, A Eady, T E Newman
{"title":"吉西他滨在非小细胞肺癌中的应用。省肺癌疾病现场组。省全身性治疗疾病现场组。","authors":"W K Evans, W Kocha, A Gagliardi, A Eady, T E Newman","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Guideline question: </strong>Is there a role for the use of gemcitabine in the treatment of patients with locally advanced or metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC)?</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>To make recommendations about the use of gemcitabine in the management of medically appropriate patients with stage IIIB-IV NSCLC.</p><p><strong>Outcomes: </strong>The outcomes of interest were survival, response rate, symptomatic response, response duration and toxicity.</p><p><strong>Perspective (values): </strong>Evidence was selected and reviewed by 2 members of the Provincial Lung Cancer Disease Site Group (DSG) of the Cancer Care Ontario Practice Guidelines Initiative. The practice guideline report was reviewed by the Provincial Lung Cancer DSG and by the Systemic Treatment Disease Site Group. These committees comprise medical and radiation oncologists, surgeons, pathologists, nurses, a psychologist, a medical sociologist and administrators. One community representative participated in the development of this practice guideline.</p><p><strong>Quality of evidence: </strong>Five phase II studies of single-agent gemcitabine in advanced NSCLC were reviewed. Four of these are published as full reports. Two randomized phase II studies comparing single-agent gemcitabine with etoposide plus cisplatin were also reviewed. One of these studies is fully published. Seven phase II studies of gemcitabine in combination with cisplatin and I phase II study of gemcitabine in combination with ifosfamide were reviewed. Three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and 1 randomized phase II study, published in abstract form, compared gemcitabine combination chemotherapy with cisplatin combination chemotherapy. An additional phase II study, published in abstract form, of gemcitabine as salvage therapy in previously treated patients was also included.</p><p><strong>Benefits: </strong>Four phase II studies of single-agent gemcitabine at a dose of 1000 mg/m2 or more showed a combined response rate of 19% (intention-to-treat analysis; 95% confidence interval [CI] 15% to 24%) or 21% (efficacy analysis; 95% CI 17% to 26%) in advanced NSCLC. Median survival ranged from 7 to 9 months. Improvement from baseline in cough, hemoptysis and dyspnea was comparable to what would be expected with radiation therapy and with standard combination chemotherapy regimens. Improvement from baseline in their performance status was reported in 52% of treated patients. The 2 randomized phase II studies reported equivalent response rates for gemcitabine compared with etoposide plus cisplatin; the response data were pooled, which resulted in a nonsignificant benefit for gemcitabine (common odds ratio [OR] 0.90; 95% CI 0.43 to 1.90; p = 0.78). Gemcitabine has most frequently been combined with cisplatin, yielding a combined response rate of 44% (intention-to-treat; 95% CI 36% to 47%) or 45% (efficacy; 95% CI 39% to 51%) from 7 phase II studies. Median survival times ranged from 10 to 14 months. One phase II randomized study compared gemcitabine-cisplatin-vinorelbine vs. cisplatin-epirubicin-vindesine plus lonidamine and demonstrated a higher response rate (62% vs. 35%) in favour of the gemcitabine combination. Three RCTs demonstrated increased response rates for the combination of gemcitabine-cisplatin over either cisplatin alone or other combination regimens [(gemcitabine-cisplatin 35% vs. etoposide-cisplatin 12%; p = 0.001), (gemcitabine-cisplatin 31% vs. cisplatin 9%; p = 0.0001), (gemcitabine-cisplatin 40% vs. mitomycin, ifosfamide, cisplatin 28%; p = 0.03)].</p><p><strong>Harms: </strong>The major dose-limiting toxicity is neutropenia. Despite this, infection rates are low. Significant adverse effects that have an impact on the patient's quality of life or require the discontinuance of treatment are reported to be less than with any other single agent or combination of agents. Grade 3 or 4 dyspnea has been reported to occur in fewer than 2% of cases and may be drug related. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)</p>","PeriodicalId":79570,"journal":{"name":"Cancer prevention & control : CPC = Prevention & controle en cancerologie : PCC","volume":"3 1","pages":"84-94"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1999-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The use of gemcitabine in non-small-cell lung cancer. Provincial Lung Cancer Disease Site Group. Provincial Systemic Treatment Disease Site Group.\",\"authors\":\"W K Evans, W Kocha, A Gagliardi, A Eady, T E Newman\",\"doi\":\"\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Guideline question: </strong>Is there a role for the use of gemcitabine in the treatment of patients with locally advanced or metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC)?</p><p><strong>Objective: </strong>To make recommendations about the use of gemcitabine in the management of medically appropriate patients with stage IIIB-IV NSCLC.</p><p><strong>Outcomes: </strong>The outcomes of interest were survival, response rate, symptomatic response, response duration and toxicity.</p><p><strong>Perspective (values): </strong>Evidence was selected and reviewed by 2 members of the Provincial Lung Cancer Disease Site Group (DSG) of the Cancer Care Ontario Practice Guidelines Initiative. 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Three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and 1 randomized phase II study, published in abstract form, compared gemcitabine combination chemotherapy with cisplatin combination chemotherapy. An additional phase II study, published in abstract form, of gemcitabine as salvage therapy in previously treated patients was also included.</p><p><strong>Benefits: </strong>Four phase II studies of single-agent gemcitabine at a dose of 1000 mg/m2 or more showed a combined response rate of 19% (intention-to-treat analysis; 95% confidence interval [CI] 15% to 24%) or 21% (efficacy analysis; 95% CI 17% to 26%) in advanced NSCLC. Median survival ranged from 7 to 9 months. Improvement from baseline in cough, hemoptysis and dyspnea was comparable to what would be expected with radiation therapy and with standard combination chemotherapy regimens. Improvement from baseline in their performance status was reported in 52% of treated patients. The 2 randomized phase II studies reported equivalent response rates for gemcitabine compared with etoposide plus cisplatin; the response data were pooled, which resulted in a nonsignificant benefit for gemcitabine (common odds ratio [OR] 0.90; 95% CI 0.43 to 1.90; p = 0.78). Gemcitabine has most frequently been combined with cisplatin, yielding a combined response rate of 44% (intention-to-treat; 95% CI 36% to 47%) or 45% (efficacy; 95% CI 39% to 51%) from 7 phase II studies. Median survival times ranged from 10 to 14 months. One phase II randomized study compared gemcitabine-cisplatin-vinorelbine vs. cisplatin-epirubicin-vindesine plus lonidamine and demonstrated a higher response rate (62% vs. 35%) in favour of the gemcitabine combination. Three RCTs demonstrated increased response rates for the combination of gemcitabine-cisplatin over either cisplatin alone or other combination regimens [(gemcitabine-cisplatin 35% vs. etoposide-cisplatin 12%; p = 0.001), (gemcitabine-cisplatin 31% vs. cisplatin 9%; p = 0.0001), (gemcitabine-cisplatin 40% vs. mitomycin, ifosfamide, cisplatin 28%; p = 0.03)].</p><p><strong>Harms: </strong>The major dose-limiting toxicity is neutropenia. Despite this, infection rates are low. Significant adverse effects that have an impact on the patient's quality of life or require the discontinuance of treatment are reported to be less than with any other single agent or combination of agents. Grade 3 or 4 dyspnea has been reported to occur in fewer than 2% of cases and may be drug related. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
指南问题:吉西他滨在局部晚期或转移性非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)患者的治疗中是否有作用?目的:提出吉西他滨在IIIB-IV期非小细胞肺癌治疗中的应用建议。结果:关注的结果是生存、反应率、症状反应、反应持续时间和毒性。观点(价值观):证据由安大略省癌症护理实践指南倡议的省级肺癌疾病现场组(DSG)的2名成员选择和审查。实践指南报告由省肺癌DSG和系统性治疗疾病现场组审查。这些委员会由医学和放射肿瘤学家、外科医生、病理学家、护士、心理学家、医学社会学家和行政人员组成。一名社区代表参与了该实践指南的制定。证据质量:回顾了吉西他滨单药治疗晚期NSCLC的5项II期研究。其中四份作为完整报告发表。两项比较单药吉西他滨与依托泊苷加顺铂的随机II期研究也进行了回顾。其中一项研究已经完全发表。综述了吉西他滨联合顺铂的7项II期研究和吉西他滨联合异环磷酰胺的1项II期研究。摘要发表的3项随机对照试验(RCTs)和1项随机II期研究比较了吉西他滨联合化疗和顺铂联合化疗。另外一项以摘要形式发表的关于吉西他滨作为先前治疗患者的补救性治疗的II期研究也包括在内。益处:4项剂量为1000 mg/m2或更高的单药吉西他滨的II期研究显示,总缓解率为19%(意向治疗分析;95%可信区间[CI] 15%至24%)或21%(疗效分析;95%可信区间为17% - 26%)。中位生存期为7至9个月。咳嗽、咯血和呼吸困难的改善与放射治疗和标准联合化疗方案的预期效果相当。接受治疗的患者中有52%的表现状况较基线有所改善。两项随机II期研究报告了吉西他滨与依托泊苷加顺铂的等效缓解率;对反应数据进行汇总,结果显示吉西他滨的获益不显著(常见优势比[OR] 0.90;95% CI 0.43 ~ 1.90;P = 0.78)。吉西他滨最常与顺铂联合使用,总缓解率为44%(意向治疗;95% CI 36% - 47%)或45%(疗效;95% CI 39%至51%),来自7项II期研究。中位生存期为10至14个月。一项II期随机研究比较了吉西他滨-顺铂-长春瑞滨与顺铂-表柔比星-长春地辛加洛尼达明,结果显示吉西他滨联合治疗的有效率更高(62%对35%)。三项随机对照试验显示,吉西他滨-顺铂联合治疗比单用顺铂或其他联合治疗方案的有效率更高(吉西他滨-顺铂35% vs依托泊滨-顺铂12%;P = 0.001),(吉西他滨-顺铂31% vs顺铂9%;P = 0.0001),吉西他滨-顺铂40% vs丝裂霉素、异环磷酰胺、顺铂28%;P = 0.03)]。危害:主要的剂量限制性毒性是中性粒细胞减少。尽管如此,感染率很低。据报道,影响患者生活质量或需要停止治疗的重大不良反应比任何其他单一药物或药物组合都要少。据报道,不到2%的病例发生3级或4级呼吸困难,可能与药物有关。(抽象截断)
The use of gemcitabine in non-small-cell lung cancer. Provincial Lung Cancer Disease Site Group. Provincial Systemic Treatment Disease Site Group.
Guideline question: Is there a role for the use of gemcitabine in the treatment of patients with locally advanced or metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC)?
Objective: To make recommendations about the use of gemcitabine in the management of medically appropriate patients with stage IIIB-IV NSCLC.
Outcomes: The outcomes of interest were survival, response rate, symptomatic response, response duration and toxicity.
Perspective (values): Evidence was selected and reviewed by 2 members of the Provincial Lung Cancer Disease Site Group (DSG) of the Cancer Care Ontario Practice Guidelines Initiative. The practice guideline report was reviewed by the Provincial Lung Cancer DSG and by the Systemic Treatment Disease Site Group. These committees comprise medical and radiation oncologists, surgeons, pathologists, nurses, a psychologist, a medical sociologist and administrators. One community representative participated in the development of this practice guideline.
Quality of evidence: Five phase II studies of single-agent gemcitabine in advanced NSCLC were reviewed. Four of these are published as full reports. Two randomized phase II studies comparing single-agent gemcitabine with etoposide plus cisplatin were also reviewed. One of these studies is fully published. Seven phase II studies of gemcitabine in combination with cisplatin and I phase II study of gemcitabine in combination with ifosfamide were reviewed. Three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and 1 randomized phase II study, published in abstract form, compared gemcitabine combination chemotherapy with cisplatin combination chemotherapy. An additional phase II study, published in abstract form, of gemcitabine as salvage therapy in previously treated patients was also included.
Benefits: Four phase II studies of single-agent gemcitabine at a dose of 1000 mg/m2 or more showed a combined response rate of 19% (intention-to-treat analysis; 95% confidence interval [CI] 15% to 24%) or 21% (efficacy analysis; 95% CI 17% to 26%) in advanced NSCLC. Median survival ranged from 7 to 9 months. Improvement from baseline in cough, hemoptysis and dyspnea was comparable to what would be expected with radiation therapy and with standard combination chemotherapy regimens. Improvement from baseline in their performance status was reported in 52% of treated patients. The 2 randomized phase II studies reported equivalent response rates for gemcitabine compared with etoposide plus cisplatin; the response data were pooled, which resulted in a nonsignificant benefit for gemcitabine (common odds ratio [OR] 0.90; 95% CI 0.43 to 1.90; p = 0.78). Gemcitabine has most frequently been combined with cisplatin, yielding a combined response rate of 44% (intention-to-treat; 95% CI 36% to 47%) or 45% (efficacy; 95% CI 39% to 51%) from 7 phase II studies. Median survival times ranged from 10 to 14 months. One phase II randomized study compared gemcitabine-cisplatin-vinorelbine vs. cisplatin-epirubicin-vindesine plus lonidamine and demonstrated a higher response rate (62% vs. 35%) in favour of the gemcitabine combination. Three RCTs demonstrated increased response rates for the combination of gemcitabine-cisplatin over either cisplatin alone or other combination regimens [(gemcitabine-cisplatin 35% vs. etoposide-cisplatin 12%; p = 0.001), (gemcitabine-cisplatin 31% vs. cisplatin 9%; p = 0.0001), (gemcitabine-cisplatin 40% vs. mitomycin, ifosfamide, cisplatin 28%; p = 0.03)].
Harms: The major dose-limiting toxicity is neutropenia. Despite this, infection rates are low. Significant adverse effects that have an impact on the patient's quality of life or require the discontinuance of treatment are reported to be less than with any other single agent or combination of agents. Grade 3 or 4 dyspnea has been reported to occur in fewer than 2% of cases and may be drug related. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)