Author:
Einhorn L H,Crawford J,Birch R,Omura G,Johnson D H,Greco F A
Abstract
From June 1982 through October 1985, the Southeastern Cancer Study Group randomized patients with limited small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) to cyclophosphamide plus doxorubicin (Adriamycin, Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH) plus vincristine (CAV) for six cycles v CAV plus concomitant thoracic irradiation as induction therapy. Patients achieving either a complete or partial response and remaining in remission after completion of induction therapy were subsequently randomized to consolidation chemotherapy consisting of cisplatin 20 mg/m2 X 4 plus etoposide (VP-16) 100 mg/m2 X 4 every 4 weeks for two courses v no further therapy. There were 160 patients entered on the consolidation phase and 148 were fully evaluable. The median survival for patients randomized to cisplatin plus VP-16 (PVP16) from start of CAV chemotherapy was 97.7 weeks, compared with 68 weeks for the no-consolidation arm (P = .0094). PVP16 consolidation also significantly increased the duration of remission, with median durations of 49 weeks v 28 weeks (P = .0008). The median durations for partial remission were 41 weeks v 23 weeks (P = .013), and for complete remission, 52 weeks v 30.5 weeks (P = .0091). Furthermore, 18 patients on PVP16 consolidation remain in a continuous complete remission for 12+ months and 13 of these are continuously disease free 2+ years. Eight patients randomized to no consolidation remain in a continuous complete remission, with only four patients disease free 2+ years. PVP16 consolidation has significantly improved the duration of remission and overall survival and appears capable of improving the cure rate in limited SCLC.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
110 articles.
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