| Literature DB >> 16760174 |
Rudolf Stadler1, Thomas Luger, Thomas Bieber, Ulrike Köhler, Ruthild Linse, Kristin Technau, Roland Schubert, Katja Schroth, Feredoun Vakilzadeh, Matthias Volkenandt, Harald Gollnick, Harald Von Eick, Fredrik Thoren, Orjan Strannegård.
Abstract
In a prospective, controlled, randomised, multicentre study 252 patients with totally resected cutaneous melanoma (248 in stage II-III and 4 in stage IV) were either treated with two doses of dacarbazine (DTIC) followed by a 6-month treatment with 3 MU thrice weekly of highly purified natural interferon-alpha (n = 128; arm A) or received no adjuvant treatment (n = 124; arm B). Treatment was well tolerated. After a median follow-up of 8.5 years ITT analysis showed that the difference in survival was statistically significant with respect to melanoma-related deaths (HR = 0.65, CI = 0.46-0.97, p = 0.022) and close to significance with respect to overall survival (HR 0.71, CI 0.49-1.00, p = 0.052). The risk reduction of melanoma-associated death, calculated by Cox proportional hazards modelling, after adjusting for identified predictive variables, was almost 50% (p = 0.002). The overall efficacy of the treatment appeared to be mainly attributable to effects observed in patients with deep and/or metastasizing tumours (HR 0.60, CI 0.40-0.90, p = 0.013).Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16760174 DOI: 10.1080/02841860600630954
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Oncol ISSN: 0284-186X Impact factor: 4.089