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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Metronomic oral vinorelbine in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer progressing after nivolumab immunotherapy: a retrospective analysis
Paolo VigneriGiuseppe Luigi BannaDariio GiuffridaMaria Rosaria ValerioNicolò BorsellinoVittorio GebbiaDario PiazzaMario Lo MauroHector Soto-parraGianfranco MancusoGiusi BlancoFrancesco VerderameLivio BlasiGiuseppina SavioMarco Aiellosubject
0301 basic medicineOncologyCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentDiseaseVinorelbine03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineMedicineLung cancerSurvival ratenon-small cell lung cancernivolumabChemotherapybusiness.industryImmunotherapymedicine.diseasemetronomic therapy030104 developmental biologyOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesisClinical Studyoral vinorelbineNivolumabbusinessProgressive diseasemedicine.drugdescription
Purpose The availability of immune checkpoint inhibitors has deeply changed the therapeutic scenario of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Up until now, chemotherapy still represents the first-line treatment for patients with advanced NSCLC not harbouring genetic mutations or lacking high expression of programmed death ligand even if the addition of immunotherapy to first-line chemotherapy has recently been shown to improve clinical outcome. We carried out a multi-institutional retrospective analysis on third-line chemotherapy with metronomic oral vinorelbine (VNR) in a series of patients with metastatic NSCLC pre-treated with first-line chemotherapy and second-line immunotherapy. Patients and methods Thirty patients with metastatic NSCLC with progressive disease after first-line chemotherapy and subsequent immunotherapy were treated with metronomic oral VNR continuously at the fixed dose of 30 mg three times per week. Results A partial response was achieved in 4 patients (13.3%), while 10 patients (33.3%) displayed disease stabilisation for an overall disease control rate of 46.7%. Median progression-free survival was 3.9 months (range 1-13 months) and median OS reached 8.1 months (range 4.0-24.0+ months) with a 12-month survival rate of 22%. Conclusion Oral metronomic VNR appears to be active and safe in patients with metastatic NSCLC in progression after first-line chemotherapy and second-line immunotherapy. The results reported, although from a limited sample, may suggest its use for long-term stabilisation of the disease with good patient compliance.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-01 |