Abstract
The purpose of this trial was to investigate the impact of systemic combination chemotherapy on survival and recurrence patterns in incompletely resected non-small-cell lung cancer. Incomplete resection was defined as presence of residual tumor in the resection margin or by presence of metastasis in the highest paratracheal lymph node sampled during protocol-directed surgical staging of the mediastinum. One hundred seventy-two patients were randomized to receive either postoperative radiotherapy (RT) alone or postoperative RT plus chemotherapy with CAP (Cytoxan [cyclophosphamide; Bristol Myers, Evansville, IN], Adriamycin [doxorubicin; Adria Laboratories, Columbus, OH], and Platinol [cisplatin; Bristol Myers]) for 6 months. One hundred sixty-four patients were eligible for analysis at a mean time since randomization of 3.7 years. The chemotherapy arm showed significantly longer recurrence-free survival (two-sided Mantel-Haenszel log rank test, P = .004). This difference holds true for nonsquamous patients (P = .01), and approaches significance for squamous patients as well (P = .08). There was a 14% difference in survival rate favoring the chemotherapy arm 1 year after randomization. Analysis of sites of recurrence showed a significant decrease in distant metastases in the chemotherapy arm. Median survival for the entire group was approximately 17 months, and 35% are alive 2 years after resection. Toxicity of treatment consisted of esophagitis (mild-moderate by Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group [ECOG] criteria) and predictable hematologic, gastrointestinal (GI), and skin toxicity expected from CAP.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
174 articles.
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