6533b7dafe1ef96bd126e2e3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Cetuximab and gemcitabine in elderly or adult PS2 patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer: The cetuximab in advanced lung cancer (CALC1-E and CALC1-PS2) randomized phase II trials

Cesare GridelliVittorio GebbiaMaria Grazia ViganòG. ValmadreManlio MencoboniAlessandro MorabitoMassimo Di MaioCiro GalloClaudio VerusioMaria Carmela PiccirilloMaria Rosaria ValerioAntonio RossiRoberto BollinaFloriana MorgilloRodolfo MattioliFrancesco CarrozzaTina CasconeFortunato CiardielloFrancesco PerronePaolo Maione

subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineOncologyAdultMaleCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtyLung NeoplasmsAdolescentSettore MED/06 - Oncologia MedicaCetuximabNSCLCAntibodies Monoclonal HumanizedDeoxycytidinelaw.inventionYoung AdultRandomized controlled triallawInternal medicineCarcinoma Non-Small-Cell LungAntineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy ProtocolsmedicineHumansLung cancerPS2 patientSurvival analysisAgedCetuximabbusiness.industryCancerAntibodies MonoclonalMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseGemcitabineGemcitabineSurgeryClinical trialTreatment OutcomeOncologyConcomitantPatient ComplianceFemalebusinessElderly patientmedicine.drug

description

Background:Two parallel randomized phase 2 trialswere performed to choose the optimal way of combining cetuximab with gemcitabine in the first-line treatment of elderly (CALC1-E) and adult PS2 (CALC1-PS2) patients with advanced NSCLC. Methods: Stage IV or IIIB NSCLC patients, aged ≥70 years with PS 0–2 for CALC1-E or aged <70 with PS2 for CALC1-PS2, not selected for EGFR expression,were eligible. Patients were randomized to concomitant (gemcitabine, for a maximum of 6 cycles, plus cetuximab until progression) or sequential (gemcitabine, for a maximum of 6 cycles, followed by cetuximab) strategy. A selection design, with 1-year survival rate as the primary endpoint, was applied, requiring 58 elderly and 42 PS2 patients. Results: All planned patients were randomized. In sequential arms, 34.5% and 60.0% patients were not able to receive cetuximab after gemcitabine in CALC1-E and CALC1-PS2, respectively. Survival rates (95% CI) at 1-year for concomitant and sequential armswere 41.4% (23.5–61.1) and 31.0% (15.3–50.8) in CALC1-E and 27.3% (10.7–50.2) and 35.0% (15.4–59.2) in CALC1-PS2. In both studies, survival curves crossed at about 10 months and the worse arm until that time became the better one at 1-year. Toxicity was similar across treatment groups. In concomitant arm of CALC1-E (but not of CALC1-PS2), survival was longer for patients who developed skin toxicity within the first two cycles of treatment. Conclusion: In both groups of patients, sequential strategy cannot be proposed for future trials because of low compliance. Inconsistency of survival outcomes makes also concomitant treatment not a candidate for further testing in unselected elderly and PS2 NSCLC patients.

10.1016/j.lungcan.2009.03.021http://hdl.handle.net/11591/185818