| Literature DB >> 27072579 |
Lei Zhao1, Jing Wang1, Huihui Li1, Juanjuan Che1, Bangwei Cao1.
Abstract
There is as yet no consensus as to the best choice among the three treatment options (maintenance, complete chemotherapy-free intervals [CFIs], and continuous) for metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC). We performed a meta-analysis of six trials (N = 2, 454 patients) to compare the safety and efficacy of those three treatment strategies. Maintenance appeared to offer an advantage over CFI with respect to progression-free survival (PFS) (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.53, 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.40-0.69). PFS and overall survival (OS) were comparable between the maintenance and continuous strategies (HR: 1.18, 95% CI, 0.96-1.46; HR: 1.05, 95% CI, 0.98-1.27, respectively), as was OS between the maintenance and CFI strategies (HR: 0.84; 95% CI, 0.70-1.00). The incidence of grade 3/4 toxicity, including neutropenia, neuropathy, hand-foot syndrome and fatigue, was lower with maintenance than with continuous therapy. A maintenance regimen utilizing bevacizumab-based doublets appeared to confer a slight advantage over bevacizumab monotherapy with respect to PFS (P = 0.011). Maintenance appeared to reduce cumulative grade 3/4 toxicity as compared to the continuous strategy, while showing comparable efficacy. Bevacizumab-based doublets appeared to be of particular value in patients with metastatic CRC.Entities:
Keywords: grade 3 to 4 toxicities; optimal maintenance strategies; pooled analysis; randomized controlled trials; systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27072579 PMCID: PMC5078106 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.8644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Trial selection criteria
MT, maintenance therapy; CT, continuous therapy.
Characteristics of relevant studies included in meta-analysis
| Source | Scope | Treatment | Sample Size | Age, Median (range), y | Outcomes and raw HRs with 95% CI | Additional survival statistics (months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chibaudel 2009 (OPTIMOX2) | Multicenter, France | 98 | 67 (35–80) | DDC, 0.71 (0.51–0.99, | DDC | |
| Simkens 2015 (CAIRO3) | Multicenter, Netherlands | 278 | 63 (26–81) | PFS1, 0.40 (0.36–0.52, | PFS1 | |
| Hegewisch 2015 (AIO 0207) (Arm A VS Arm C) | Multicenter, Germany | 158 | 64 (25–82) | PFS, 0.48 (0.37–0.61, | PFS | |
| Hegewisch 2015 (AIO 0207) (Arm B vs. Arm C) | Multicenter, Germany | 156 | 65 (32–82) | PFS, 0.69 (0.55–0.87, | PFS | |
| Tournigand 2006 (OPTIMOX1) | Multicenter, France | 309 | 64 (32–80) | DDC, 0.99 (0.81–1.15, | DDC: 10.6 vs. 9.0; | |
| DÍAZ-RUBIO 2012 (MACRO) | Multicenter, Spain | 241 | 64 (33–82) | PFS, 1.10 (0.89–1.35) | PFS: 9.7 (8.3–10.6) vs. 10.4 (9.4–11.9); | |
| Yalcin 2013 | Multicenter, Turkey | 61 | 56 (34–82) | PFS, 1.67 (NR), | PFS: 11.0 (9.1–12.9) vs. 8.3 (7.1–9.5); | |
Abbreviations: BEV = Bevacizumab; Cape = capecitabine; Cet = cetuximab; CFI = chemotherapy-free interval; FLOX = 5-FU/leucovorin/oxaliplatin; FOLFOX = folinic acid(leucovorin)/5-FU/oxaliplatin; m = modified; mos = months; NR = not reported; PD = disease progression; 5FU = 5-fluorouracil; PFS = progression-free survival; OS = overall survival; DDC = duration of disease control; RR = objective response rate.
From randomization date to second disease progression.
From randomization to disease progression or death (not including induction time).
PFS, or, if induction therapy was reintroduced, addition of the initial PFS and the PFS of the reintroduction.
Characteristics of other relevant studies included in the pooled-analysis
| Source | Scope | Treatment | Sample size | Median age (range) in years | Summary statistics on survival (months) | Criteria for start time for PFS or OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tournigand, 2015 (DREAM; OPTIMOX) | Multicenter, France, Austria, and Canada | Arm 1: 228 | Arm 1: 63 (57–70) | Arm 1: PFS, 4.9 (4.1–5.7); OS, 22.1 (19.6–26.7) | PFS: From date of maintenance randomization to first PD. | |
| Tveit 2012 (NORDIC VII) | Multicenter, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland | Arm A: 185 | Arm A: 61.2 (29.9–74.8) | Arm A: PFS, 7.9 (7.3–8.5); | PFS: From random assignment to the first recorded PD or death. | |
| Johnsson 2013 (Nordic ACT) | Multicenter, Denmark, Sweden | Arm 1: 79 | Arm 1: 65 (43–82) | Arm 1: PFS, 4.23; OS, 22.8 (16.6–25.3) | PFS, OS: From start of maintenance treatment. | |
| Waddell 2011 (XelQuali) | Single-arm, Two centers, UK | 35 | 58 (38–79) | PFS, 8.1 (6.2–11.8) | PFS: From the first day of treatment to first evidence of clinical/radiological PD or death. | |
| Nakayama 2011 (CCOG-070) | Single-arm, Japan | 21 | 58 (38–79) | PFS, 7.9; DDC, 9.3; OS, NR | DDC defined as PFS, or, addition of the initial PFS and the PFS of the reintroduction. |
Abbreviations: BEV = Bevacizumab; Cape = capecitabine; Erlo = erlotinib; Cet = cetuximab; CFI = chemotherapy-free interval; FLOX = 5-FU/leucovorin/oxaliplatin; FOLFOX = folinic acid (leucovorin)/5-FU/oxaliplatin; XELOX = capecitabine/oxaliplatin; XELIRI = capecitabine/Irinotecan; m = modified; mos = months; NR = not reported; PD = disease progression; 5FU = 5-fluorouracil; PFS = progression-free survival; OS = overall survival; DDC = duration of disease control.
Figure 2PFS and OS in trials comparing maintenance strategies with CFIs/continuous treatment strategies
The size of each data marker correlates with the weighting factor (1/SE2) assigned to the study. For the combined results, the length of the diamond represents the 95% confidence interval of the summary. PFS, Progression free survival; OS, overall survival; HR, hazard ratio; CFI, complete chemotherapy-free interval.
Figure 3Incidence and relative risk of grade 3 or 4 toxicity with MT and CT
Treatment effect was calculated using a random-effect model. OR, Odds ratio; MT, maintenance therapy; CT, continuous therapy.
Figure 4Pooled analysis of progression-free and overall survival
BEV, Bevacizumab; Cap, capecitabine; FOLFOX, folinic acid (leucovorin)/5-FU/oxaliplatin; m, modified; Erl, erlotinib; Cet, cetuximab; PFS, progression-free survival; OS, overall survival.