| Literature DB >> 26468218 |
Yanhong Deng1, Yue Cai2, Jiayu Lin2, Ling Jiang2, Huabin Hu2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the overall survival of patients with KRAS wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) after sequentially receiving both bevacizumab and cetuximab during the course of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: bevacizumab; cetuximab; metastatic colorectal cancer; sequential treatment
Year: 2015 PMID: 26468218 PMCID: PMC4650979 DOI: 10.1093/gastro/gov051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gastroenterol Rep (Oxf)
Patient characteristics
| Group A | Group B | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 49.5 + 15.4 | 47.7 + 14.2 | 0.779 |
| Female sex | 5 (62.5%) | 4 (22.2%) | 0.078 |
| Involved organs >1 | 5 (62.5%) | 6 (33.3) | 0.105 |
| Synchronous metastasis | 7 (87.5%) | 6 (66.7%) | 0.375 |
| Differentiation | 0.802 | ||
| High | 3 (37.5%) | 5 (27.8%) | |
| Moderate | 4 (50.0%) | 9 (50.0%) | |
| Poor | 1 (12.5%) | 4 (22.2%) | |
| First-line chemotherapy regimens | 0.653 | ||
| Oxaliplatin based | 7 (87.5%) | 12 (66.7%) | |
| Irinotecan based | 1 (12.5%) | 6 (33.3%) | |
| Carcinoembryonic antigen (ng/ml) | 67.1 + 85.0 | 122.9 + 244.6 | 0.400 |
| Lactate dehydrogenase (U/L) | 206.4 + 36.3 | 276.8 + 13.8 | 0.314 |
| Hemoglobin (g/L) | 119.5 + 29.4 | 121.4 + 13.8 | 0.869 |
| Platelet (×109) | 287.7 + 137.8 | 2114.3 + 98.9 | 0.206 |
| CA199 (U/L) | 110.6 + 207.8 | 108.2 + 260.6 | 0.980 |
Data expressed as mean ± standard deviation or number (%). P values were derived using Fisher exact tests and Student t tests for categorical and continuous variables, respectively.
Figure 1.Progression-free survival curves of group A and group B patients. Progression-free survival was identical for patients who received bevacizumab (group A) first or cetuximab first (group B) (13 vs 10 months, P = 0.798).
Figure 2.Overall survival curves of group A and group B patients. Overall survival was identical for patients who received bevacizumab (group A) first or cetuximab first (group B) (44.0 vs 39.0 months, P = 0.862).
Figure 3.Overall survival differences between young and old patients. Patients aged ≥40 years had significantly better survival than those aged <40 years (44 vs 22 months, P = 0.029).
Figure 4.Overall survival difference between synchronous and metachronous patients. Patients with synchronous metastasis had lower survival rates than those with metachronous metastasis (36 months vs unreached, P = 0.038).