| Literature DB >> 26750506 |
Nobuyuki Horita1, Masaki Yamamoto1, Takashi Sato1, Toshinori Tsukahara1, Hideyuki Nagakura1, Ken Tashiro1, Yuji Shibata1, Hiroki Watanabe1, Kenjiro Nagai1, Kentaro Nakashima1, Ryota Ushio1, Misako Ikeda1, Nobuaki Kobayashi2, Masaharu Shinkai3, Makoto Kudo3, Takeshi Kaneko1.
Abstract
Currently, amrubicin is permitted for relapsed small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) only in Japan. The efficacy and adverse effects of amrubicin as reported by previous studies varied greatly. The inclusion criterion was a prospective study that was able to provide data for efficacy and safety by the AMR single agent regimen as second-line chemotherapy for a patient with SCLC. Binary data were meta-analyzed with the random-model generic inverse variance method. We included nine articles consisted of 803 patients. The pooled three-, six-, and nine-month progression-free survival were 63% (95% CI 57-69%, I(2) = 53%), 28% (95% CI 21-35%, I(2) = 71%), and 10% (95% CI 6-14%, I(2) = 41%), respectively. The pooled six-, 12-, and 18-month overall survival were 69% (95% CI 61-78%, I(2) = 83%), 36% (95% CI 28-44%, I(2) = 80%), and 15% (95% CI 8-21%, I(2) = 81%), respectively. Amrubicin seemed much more beneficial for Japanese patients. However, compared to the efficacy of topotecan presented in a previous meta-analysis, amrubicin may be a better treatment option than topotecan for both Japanese and Euro-American. Adverse effects by amrubicin were almost exclusively observed to be hematological. Notably, grade III/IV neutropenia incidence was 70% and febrile neutropenia incidence was 12%.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26750506 PMCID: PMC4707435 DOI: 10.1038/srep18999
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Flow chart for study search (PRISMA diagram).
List of included studies.
| Study | Country | Design | Phase | N | Dosage mg/m2 | PS 0/1/2 | Median age | Male (%) | Relapse type cutoff | Refractory relapse (%) | Third line (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ettinger 2010 | USA | Single arm AMR | II | 75 | 40 | 24/38/13 | 63 | 48 | 90 days | 100 | 0 |
| Igawa 2007 | Japan | Single arm AMR | ? | 27 | 40(a) | 2/21/4 | 64 | 85 | 8 weeks | 30 | 52 |
| Inoue 2008 | Japan | RCT, vs TOP | II | 29 | 40 | 14/10/5 | 70 | 83 | 90 days | 41 | 0 |
| Inoue 2015 | Japan | RCT, vs re-challenge | II | 27 | 40 | 15/10/2 | 64 | 96 | 90 days | 0 | 0 |
| Jotte 2011 | USA | RCT, vs TOP | II | 50 | 40 | 20/24/6 | 63 | 46 | 90 days | 0 | 0 |
| Kaira 2010 | Japan | Single arm AMR(b) | II | 29 | 35 | 12/12/5 | 67 | 86 | 90 days | 66 | 24 |
| Murakami 2014 | Japan | Single arm AMR | II | 82 | 40 | 34/48/0 | 66 | 79 | 90 days | 100 | 12 |
| Onoda 2006 | Japan | Single arm AMR | II | 60 | 40 | 28/28/4 | 67 | 77 | 60 days | 27 | 23 |
| Pawel 2014 | Germany | RCT, vs TOP | III | 424 | 40 | 126/289/9 | 62 | 58 | 90 days | 47 | 0 |
RCT: randomized controlled trial. AMR: amrubicin. TOP: topotecan. N: number of small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) patients treated with amrubicin. PS: performance status.
(a): Igawa et al. used 40 mg/m2 for all of the second-line cases (N = 20) and a half of the third-line cases (N = 7), but the other half of the third-line cases (N = 7) were treated with 35 mg/m2.
(b) Kaira et al. evaluated both SCLC and non-SCLC. We extracted only data concerning SCLC.
Figure 2Forrest plots for objective responses and survival.
RR: response rate. DCR: disease control rate. 6 m PFS: 6-months progression-free survival. 12 m OS: 12-months overall survival. SE: standard error. IV: inverse variance method. 95% CI: 95% confidence interval.
Estimated responses and survivals for four second-line scenarios.
| Sensitive-R Japanese | Refractory-R Japanese | Sensitive-R Euro-American | Refractory-R Euro-American | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Response rate | 61% (50–71%) | 38% (28–47%) | 43% (36–49%) | 19% (13–26%) |
| Disease control rate | 83% (73–93%) | 82% (72–91%) | 69% (62–76%) | 68% (61–75%) |
| 3 m progression-free survival | 72% (59–85%) | 58% (42–74%) | 66% (55–77%) | 52% (42–64%) |
| 6 m progression-free survival | 36% (20–52%) | 15% (0–34%) | 40% (25–55%) | 18% (4–32%) |
| 9 m progression-free survival | 16% (5–28%) | 7% (0–19%) | 16% (7–25%) | 7% (0–15%) |
| 6 m overall survival | 83% (70–96%) | 74% (61–88%) | 62% (50–74%) | 53% (42–65%) |
| 12 m overall survival | 51% (35–66%) | 34% (18–50%) | 35% (21–50%) | 19% (5–33%) |
| 18 m overall survival | 24% (7–42%) | 15% (0–33%) | 15% (0–31%) | 5% (0–21%) |
m, month. Sensitive-R, sensitive-relapsed. Refractory-R, refractory-relapsed.
One cell indicates a result from one meta-regression. The estimated rate of response or survival accompanied with 95% CI was presented. Three co-variables were used for each analysis: sensitive relapse compared to refractory relapse, the Japanese study compared to the Euro-American study, and the second-line chemotherapy compared to the third-line chemotherapy.
Figure 3Forrest plots for adverse effects.
Fbl neutropenia: febrile neutropenia. SE: standard error. IV: inverse variance method. 95% CI: 95% confidence interval.