Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0684249 (lung carcinoma)
23,830 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To determine if chemotherapy dose intensity (DI) influences treatment outcome, 60 published studies in limited- and extensive-stage small-cell carcinoma of the lung (SCCL) were retrospectively analyzed for relationship between intended DI and response (complete response [CR] or partial response [PR]) or median survival (MS). Agents used in the regimens included cyclophosphamide (C), doxorubicin (A), vincristine (V), etoposide (E), and cisplatin (P). Relative DI (RDI) of each study regimen was calculated against a reference regimen, and weighted regression analysis was used. Additionally, analysis of individual drug RDI within combinations was performed. For CAV, increasing RDI of the regimen showed no correlation with outcome. For the individual drugs, C RDI correlated positively, while A RDI correlated negatively with attainment of CR in limited disease, but both only after unduly influential observations were eliminated. In extensive-stage disease, A RDI correlated positively with CR+, PR but only in randomized trials, and this correlation lost statistical significance after unduly influential observations were eliminated. For CAE and CAVE, the RDI of the regimens correlated positively with MS in extensive-stage disease as did the C RDI. In limited disease, the C RDI correlated negatively with MS. For EP, no significant correlations were seen. We conclude that DI-outcome correlations are not consistent for these chemotherapy regimens in SCCL. Meta-analysis of retrospective data can generate hypotheses for testing in prospective clinical trials, but study sample and method of analysis can appreciably affect conclusions.
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PMID:Dose-intensity meta-analysis of chemotherapy regimens in small-cell carcinoma of the lung. 184 68

One hundred nine previously untreated patients with small cell lung cancer were treated for five consecutive days with 20 mg/m2/day of cisplatin and 600 mg/m2/day of 5-fluorouracil. One cycle of chemotherapy was administered every three weeks. The patients received a median number of three cycles. Then they were transferred to CAE chemotherapy. A 77% overall response rate (95% confidence interval of 0.70-0.85) was observed after initial cisplatin-5FU treatment. Twenty-three complete responses (21%) and 62 partial responses (56%) were obtained. In cerebral metastases the response rate was high at 91% (21 out of 23), with 43% complete responses. In the limited forms, statistical survival at 1 year was 25%. A Grade 3-4 thrombocytopaenia was observed in 10 patients (9%) and a Grade 2-3 leukopaenia in four patients. Three patients suffered from a Grade 2 cardiac toxicity. The cisplatin-5-fluorouracil combination demonstrates promising initial response rate in small cell lung cancers. Its main interest is in its important action on cerebral metastases and its moderate haematological toxicity.
Lung Cancer 1994 Sep
PMID:Cisplatin-5-fluorouracil in small cell lung cancer. A phase II study in 109 patients. 781 4