| Literature DB >> 27655725 |
Xiaolong Qi1, Yanna Liu1, Wei Wang2, Danxian Cai1, Wende Li3, Jialiang Hui1, Chuan Liu1, Yanxia Zhao4, Guoxin Li1.
Abstract
This study aims to provide an overview of different treatment for advanced gastric cancer. In the present study, we systematically reviewed the major findings from relevant meta-analyses. A total of 54 relevant papers were searched via the PubMed, Web of Science, and Google scholar databases. They were classified according to the mainstay treatment modalities such as surgery, chemotherapy and others. Primary outcomes including overall survival, response rate, disease-free survival, recurrence-free survival, progression-free survival, time-to-progression, time-to failure, recurrence and safety were summarized. The recommendations and uncertainties regarding the treatment of advanced gastric cancer were also proposed. It was suggested that laparoscopic gastrectomy was a safe and technical alternative to open gastrectomy. Besides, neoadjuvant chemotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy were thought to benefit the survival over surgery alone. And it was demonstrated in the study that targeted therapy like anti-angiogenic and anti-HER2 agents but anti-EGFR agent might have a significant survival benefit.Entities:
Keywords: advanced gastric cancer; chemotherapy; management; meta-analysis; surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27655725 PMCID: PMC5363654 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Flowchart of study inclusion
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding LG vs. OG
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lu C[ | Surg Endosc(2015) | LADG vs. ODG | NA. | NA. | D2 lymphadenectomy performed laparoscopically was as effective as an open procedure in AGC. |
| Quan Y[ | Gastric Cancer (2015) | LG vs. OG | OS:1-, 3-, 5-y: statistically similar. | DFS: 3-, 5-year: statistically similar. Recurrence: favor LG. | LG appeared comparable with OG in short- and long-term results. |
| Huang YL[ | Int J Clin Exp Med(2014) | LAG vs. OG | OS: 3-y: statistically similar. | Recurrence: statistically similar. | LAG with D2 lymph node dissection was a feasible and safe procedure for AGC. |
| Zou ZH[ | World J Gastroenterol (2014) | LGD2 vs. OGD2 | OS: 3-, 5- y: statistically similar. | DFS (3-, 5- year), Recurrence/ metastasis: statistically similar. | LGD2 might be safe and effective, and offered some advantages over OGD2 for locally AGC. |
| Chen K[ | World J Surg Oncol (2013) | LG vs. OG | OS (1-, 3-, 5- y), Mortality: statistically similar. | DFS (3-, 5- year), Recurrence: statistically similar. | LG was a safe technical alternative to OG with a lower complication rate and enhanced postoperative recovery. |
| Ye LY[ | J Zhejiang Univ Sci B (2013) | LAG vs. OG | NA. | Recurrence: statistically similar. | LAG could be performed safely for AGC with adequate lymphadenectomy and has several short-term advantages. |
| Qiu J[ | Surg Laparosc Endosc Percutan Tech (2013) | LADG vs. ODG | OS:3-y: statistically similar. | Recurrence: statistically similar. | The oncologic outcomes of LADG for AGC patients were comparable with open approach. |
| Choi YY[ | J Surg Oncol (2013) | LG vs. OG | Statistically similar. | DFS: statistically similar. | There was no evidence that LG was inferior to OG. |
| Martinez-Ramos D[ | Rev Esp Enferm Dig (2011) | LG vs. OG | Statistically similar. | NA. | LG was associated with a longer operative time but lower blood loss and shorter postoperative hospital stay. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding TCM
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Li J[ | Chin J Integr Med (2015) | SQFZ injection+ chemotherapy vs. chemotherapy alone | NA. | NA. | Quality of life, complete remission and partial remission, AEs: favor SQFZ injection+ chemotherapy. | This systematic review found encouraging albeit limited evidence for SFI combined with chemotherapy. |
| Yao K[ | J Cancer Res Ther (2014) | SQFZ injection + chemotherapy vs. chemotherapy alone | NA. | Overall RR: favor SQFZ +chemotherapy. | The Karnofsky score (KPS): higher in SQFZ injection+ chemotherapy. | SQFZ+ chemotherapy could improve the clinical efficacy and performance status in patients with AGC. |
| Xie X[ | Med Hypotheses (2013) | Huachansu+ chemotherapy vs. chemotherapy alone | OS: 1-year: statistically similar. | NA. | Total RR, KPS, gastrointestinal side effects, leucocytopenia: favor Huachansu+ chemotherapy | Huchansu+ chemotherapy improved RR, increased Karnofsky score and reduced leucocytopenia. |
| Huang S[ | China J Chin Mat Med (2011) | Compound matrine injection+ cisplatin vs. cisplatin | NA. | NA. | Quality of life, clinical efficacy, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, gastrointestinal AEs: favor combination therapy. | Compound matrine injection+ cisplatin chemotherapy could improve the quality of life with lower AEs. |
| Wang C[ | Mod J Integr Tradi Chin West Med (2011) | KLT+ chemotherapy vs. chemotherapy alone | OS: 1-y: KLT+ chemotherapy. | NA. | Quality of life, clinical efficacy, liver function, cachexia, AEs: favor KLT+ chemotherapy. | KLT+ chemotherapy improved the curative effect and survival rate with lower incidence of AEs. |
*no data was reported regarding SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP in the included studies
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding regarding NAC and AC
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xiao F[ | Chongqing Medicine (2012) | Surgery with vs. without NAC | Favor NAC | NA. | Resection rate: favor NAC. Peri-operative mortality: statistically similar. | NAC could improve the tumor resection rate and the survival rate in AGC patients without increasing the operative risk. |
| Li W[ | World J Gastroenterol (2010) | Surgery with vs. without NAC | Favor NAC | PFS: 3-year: favor NAC. | Tumor down-staging rate, R0 resection rate: favor NAC. Peri- operative mortality: statistically similar. | NAC could improve tumor stage and survival rate of patients with AGC with a rather good safety. |
| Sun J[ | BMC Cancer (2013) | (Include palliative gastrectomy with vs. without AC). | Favor palliative gastrectomy with AC. | NA. | NA. | Palliative gastrectomy combined with chemotherapy maight improve survival. |
| Sun P[ | Br J Surg (2009) | Surgery with vs. without AC. | Favor surgery with AC. | NA. | NA. | Postoperative chemotherapy could improve OS after radical surgery for gastric cancer. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding Surgery with vs. without IPC
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coccolini F[ | Eur J Surg Oncol (2014) | Surgery with vs. without IPC. | OS: 1-, 2-,3-year: favor surgery+IPC; 5-year: statistically similar. | Overall recurrence, peritoneal recurrence, haematogenous metastasis: favor surgery + IPC. Lymph-nodal recurrence: statistically similar. | Mortality: 1-, 2-, 3-year: favor surgery+ IPC; 5-year: statistically similar; 2-, 3-year in patients with loco-regional nodal metastasis, 1, 2-year in patients with serosal infiltration: favor surgery+IPC. Morbidity: higher in surgery alone. | IPC had positive effect on peritoneal recurrence and distant metastasis. Morbidity rate is incremented by IPC. Loco-regional lymph-nodes invasion in patients affected by AGC was not a contraindication to IPC. |
| Yan TD[ | Ann Surg Oncol (2007) | Surgery with vs. without IPC. | Favor surgery with HIIPC or with HIIPC+ EPIPC (but statistically similar between surgery with NIIPC, EPIPC or DPIPC and surgery without IPC). | Peritoneal recurrence (surgery with HIIPC or NIIPC vs. control): statistically similar. | Perioperative mortality: statistically similar. Risk of intra-abdominal abscess, neutropenia: higher in IPC+ surgery. | HIIPC with or without EPIPC after resection of AGC improved the overall survival. However, increased risk of intra-abdominal abscess and neutropenia were also demonstrated. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding lymphadenectomy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang Z[ | World J Gastroenterol (2010) | D4 vs. D2 lymphadenectomy | OS: 5-y: statistically similar | NA. | Postoperative morbidity and mortality: statistically similar; Operation time, blood loss: favor D2 group. | D4 could be performed as safely as standard D2 dissection without increasing post-operative mortality but failed to benefit OS. |
| Zhang YL[ | Chin J Gen Surg (2010) | D2 vs. D4 lymphadenectomy | NA. | SR: 5-y: Statistically similar; Recurrence: 5-y: statistically similar. | Postoperative mortality and complications: statistically similar. | The efficacy and safety of D2 and D4 lymph node dissection for AGC patients was significantly similar but have yet to be accurately analysed. |
| Zhang L[ | Chin Gen Prac (2011) | D2 vs. D3 lymphadenectomy | NA. | SR: 5-y: statistically similar | Postoperative mortality, anastomotic leakage, pneumonia: statistically similar; Pancreatic leakage, operative time, blood loss: favor D2 lymphadenectomy. | Further rigorously controlled trials are required before conclusions on which procedure was more favorable could be made. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding other topics of “Surgery”
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sun J[ | BMC Cancer (2013) | Palliative gastrectomy vs. non-palliative gastrectomy. | Favor palliative gastrectomy (especially stage M1 GC) | NA. | NA. | Palliative gastrectomy for AGC might be associated with longer survival, especially for patients with stage M1 gastric cancer. |
| Sun J[ | BMC Cancer (2013) | (Included palliative gastrectomy with vs. without hepatic resection). | Favor gastrectomy+ hepatic resection. | NA. | NA. | Palliative gastrectomy combined with hepatic resection might improve survival. |
| Liu HP[ | Dig Surg (2011) | Drain vs. no drain after gastrectomy. | NA. | NA. | Wound infection, postoperative pulmonary infection, intra-abdominal abscess, mortality, number of postoperative days until passing of flatus and initiation of soft diet: statistically similar. Postoperative complications, hospital stay: lower in the no-drain group. | Avoiding the use of abdominal drains might reduce drain-related complications and shorten hospital stay after gastrectomy. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding chemotherapy vs. BSC
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Badiani B[ | World J Clin Oncol (2015) | 6 regimens of chemotherapy vs. BSC | OS: paclitaxel with/without ramucirumab vs. BSC: favor chemotherapy; other 4 vs. BSC: statistically similar. | NA. | NA. | Both paclitaxel monotherapy and ramucirumab + paclitaxel determined a significant prolongation in survival as compared with BSC. |
| Iacovelli R[ | PLoS One (2014) | (Include chemotherapy vs. BSC) | OS: patient ECOG=0: favor chemotherapy; patient ECOG≥1: favor chemotherapy. | NA. | NA. | Patients with symptomatic disease should not be immediately excluded by further lines of therapy. |
| Kim HS[ | Ann Oncol (2013) | Second-line chemotherapy vs. BSC | Favor Second-line chemotherapy. | NA. | NA. | This study demonstrated evidence to support second-line chemotherapy in AGC. |
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include chemotherapy vs. BSC). | Favor chemotherapy | NA. | TTP: favor chemotherapy. | Chemotherapy significantly improved survival in comparison to BSC. |
| Casaretto L[ | Braz J Med Biol Res (2006) | Chemotherapy vs. BSC | OS: 3-, 6-mo: statistically similar. 12-mo: favor chemotherapy. | Objective RR: statistically similar. | NA. | Chemotherapy increased the 1-y SR, provided a longer symptom-free period of 6 months and an improvement in quality of life. |
| Wagner AD[ | J Clin Oncol (2006) | (Include chemotherapy vs. BSC). | Favor chemotherapy. | NA. | NA. | - |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding S-1-based therapy vs. 5-FU-based therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ter Veer E[ | Gastric Cancer (2016) | (Include S-1-based therapy vs. 5-FU- based therapy) | Statistically similar. | Objective RR: favor S-1-based therapy. | PFS: statistically similar. | S-1-based therapy showed no difference in survival, but the toxicity profile of S-1 was clearly more advantageous in Western patients. |
| Wu FL[ | Medicine (Baltimore) (2015) | (Include S-1 based therapy vs. 5-FU- based therapy). | Favor S-1-based therapy. | Objective RR: favor S-1-based therapy. | PFS: favor S-1-based therapy. | S-1-based chemotherapy was favorable to AGC patients with better clinical benefit than 5-FU-based chemotherapy. |
| Yang J[ | World J Gastroenterol (2014) | (Include S-1 based therapy vs. 5-FU -based therapy). | Favor S-1-based regimens. | Objective RR: favor S-1-based regimens. | PFS: statistically similar. TTF: favor S-1-based regimens | S-1-based chemotherapy prolonged OS and TTF, and induced less leukopenia and stomatitis. |
| Li DH[ | Tumour Biol (2014) | S-1-based versus 5-FU-based chemotherapy | Favor S-1-based therapy | Overall RR: statistically similar. | TTF: statistically similar. | S-1-based therapy was favorable in OS and safety profile as first-line treatment in AGC. It was prone to improving overall RR and TTF, though the difference was not significant. |
| Liu H[ | Medicine (Baltimore) (2014) | S-1+ paclitaxel vs. 5-FU+ paclitaxel | NA. | Overall RR: statistically similar. | Median PFS: favor S-1+ paclitaxel therapy. 6-mo PFS, TTF, TTP: statistically similar. | S-1+ paclitaxel therapy was a good alternative strategy for patients who could not tolerate a continuous intravenous infusion. |
| Huang J[ | Med Oncol (2011) | S-1-based therapy vs. 5-FU-based therapy | Favor S-1-based therapy. | Overall RR: statistically similar. | NA. | S-1-based therapy significantly improved OS. Overall RR and safety profile were considerable between two groups. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding S-1-based vs. capecitabine-based therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ter Veer E[ | Gastric Cancer (2016) | (Include S-1-based vs. capecitabine-based therapy) | Statistically similar. | Objective RR: statistically similar. | PFS: statistically similar. | Grade 3-4 neutropenia and grade 1-2 hand-foot syndrome: lower in S-1-based therapy. Febrile neutropenia, serious AEs, toxicity-related deaths: statistically similar. | S-1-based therapy showed no difference in survival but showed a better toxicity profile compared with capecitabine based therapy. |
| Wu FL[ | Medicine (Baltimore) (2015) | (Include S-1- based vs. capecitabine-based therapy) | Statistically similar. | Overall RR: statistically similar. | PFS: statistically similar. | Overall grade 3-4 toxicity: statistically similar. Grade 3 to 4 toxicity of diarrhea: lower in S-1-based therapy. | S-1-based chemotherapy had equivalent antitumor compared with capecitabine based therapy. |
| Yang J[ | World J Gastroenterol (2014) | (Include S-1 based vs. capecitabine-based therapy). | Statistically similar. | Objective RR, TTF: statistically similar. | PFS: statistically similar. | Grade 3 or 4 AEs: statistically similar. | S-1 and capecitabine could be used for AGC interchangeably. |
| He MM[ | PLoS One (2013) | S-1-based vs. capecitabine-based chemotherapy as first-line treatment. | OS, Survival probability (0.5-, 1-, 2-y): statistically similar. | Overall RR: statistically similar. | TTP: statistically similar. Progression-free probability: 3-mo, 6-mo: statistically similar. | Grade 3- 4 hematological and non-hematological toxicities: statistically similar (except hand-foot syndrome: less in S-1-based chemotherapy). | S-1-based chemotherapy was associated with non-inferior antitumor efficacy and better safety profile, We recommended S-1 and capecitabine could be used interchangeably for AGC, at least in Asia. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding S-1-based and combination therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wu FL[ | Medicine (Baltimore) (2015) | (Include S-1 -based vs. cisplatin-based therapy) | Statistically similar. | Objective RR: statistically similar. | PFS: statistically similar. | NA. | - |
| Ter Veer E[ | Gastric Cancer (2016) | (Include S-1-based combination therapy vs. S-1 monotherapy) | Favor S-1 combination therapy. | Objective RR: favor S-1 combination therapy. | PFS: favor S-1 combination therapy. | AEs: higher in S-1 combination therapy. | S-1 combination therapy was more efficacious than S-1 monotherapy. |
| Liu GF[ | World J Gastroenterol (2014) | S-1-based combination therapy vs. S-1 monotherapy | Favor S-1 combination therapy. | Overall RR: favor S-1 combination therapy. | PFS: favor S-1 combination therapy. | Grade 3-4 leucopenia, neutropenia, diarrhea: higher in S-1 combination therapy. | S-1-based combination therapy was superior to monotherapy in terms of OS, PFS and overall RR. |
| Wu JR[ | Tumour Biol (2014) | S-1-based combination therapy vs. S-1 monotherapy. | Favor S-1 combination therapy. | Objective RR: favor S-1 combination therapy. | PFS: favor S-1 combination therapy. | Grade 3/4 toxicity event: higher in S-1 combination therapy. | For the Asian population, S-1 combination therapy improved OS and PFS and enhanced objective RR. The safety profile was poorer in patients with S-1 combination therapy |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding oxaliplatin-based vs. cisplatin-based therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Montagnani F[ | Gastric Cancer (2011) | Oxaliplatin vs. cisplatin. | NA. | NA. | PFS: favor oxaliplatin. | Neutropenia, thromboembolic: lower in oxaliplation. Neurotoxicity: higher in oxaliplation. | A small but significant survival benefit of oxaliplatin was associated with less toxicity and better tolerability, especially in older patients and when used in two-drug, bi-weekly regimens. |
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include oxaliplatin-vs. cisplatin-containing regimens). | Statistically similar | Objective RR: favor oxaliplatin -based therapy. | PFS:statistically similar. | Treatment related death, treatment discontinuation due to toxicity: statistically similar. | These results confirmed the non-inferiority of oxaliplatin, as compared to cisplatin, in the treatment of AGC. |
| Gong JF[ | Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi (2009) | Oxaliplatin- based chemotherapy vs. cisplatin -based chemotherapy | OS: 1-y: favor oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy | Objective RR: favor oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy. | NA. | Peripheral neurotoxicity: higher in oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy; Anemia/nusea/vomiting: higher in cisplatin-based chemotherapy. | Oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy was well-tolerated and more effective than cisplatin in AGC. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding capecitabine-based therapy vs.5-FU -based therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Xu HB[ | Eur J Clin Pharmacol (2015) | Capecitabine+ oxaliplatin (XELOX) vs. 5-fluorouracil/ leucovorin+ oxaliplatin (FOLFOXs) | NA. | Overall RR: statistically similar | NA. | Clinical benefit rate: statistically similar. Nausea, stomatitis, diarrhea and alopecia: lower in capecitabine regimen. Hand-foot syndrome: higher in capecitabine based regimen. | Owing to limited data and potential bias of the included studies, further rigorously controlled trials are required. |
| Ma Y[ | J Clin Pharm Ther (2012) | Capecitabine-based vs.5-FU-based therapy. | Favor capecitabine-based chemotherapy | Overall RR: favor capecitabine-based chemotherapy | NA. | Grade 3 or 4 leukopenia, stomatitis and nausea and vomiting, hand-foot syndrome: lower in capecitabine-based regimens; Haematological toxicity: statistically similar | Capecitabine based chemotherapy strategies showed prolonged OS and enhanced overall RR.AGC. Asian patients also showed less grade 3/4 gastrointestinal toxicity with the capecitabine based regimens compared with Caucascian patients. |
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include regimens containing oral 5-FU prodrugs vs. intravenous fluoropyrimidines). | Statistically similar | Objective RR: favor capecitabine- containing regimen | PFS: statistically similar. | Treatment related death, treatment discontinuation due to toxicity: statistically similar. | Gastric cancer patients with adequate renal function and compliance should be treated with capecitabine instead of 5-FU. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding CPT-11-based therapy vs. non CPT-11-based therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Qi WX[ | Int J Cancer (2013) | CPT-11-containing vs. non-CPT-11-containing regimen. | Favor CPT-11-containing regiments. | Overall RR: statistically similar. | 1-y SR, TTF: statistically similar; PFS: favor CPT-11-containing regiments. | Grade 3/4 fatigue: higher in CPT-11-containing regimen. | The study provided strong evidence for a survival benefit of CPT-11-containing regimen as first-line treatment for AGC. |
| Wang DL[ | World J Gastroenterol (2010) | CPT-11-based chemotherapy vs. non CPT-11-based chemotherapy. | Statistically similar | Overall RR: statistically similar. | TTF: favor CPT-11-containing chemotherapy | Grade 3/4 haemotological toxicity and gastrointestinal toxicity: lower in CPT-11- containing | CPT-11-based therapy was advantageous over non CPT-11-based chemotherapy for TTF with no significant toxicity. |
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include CPT-11-containing vs. non-CPT-11-containing regimen). | Statistically similar | Objective RR: statistically similar. | PFS: statistically similar. | Treatment related death, treatment discontinuation due to toxicity: statistically similar. | CPT-11-containing regimens should be considered as a true and at least equally effective alternative to platinum-based combinations in first-line therapy |
| Wagner AD[ | J Clin Oncol (2006) | (Include CPT-11- containing vs. non CPT-11- containing therapy). | Statistically similar | NA. | NA. | Treatment related death: statistically similar. | CPT-11-containing regimens exhibited a benefit in survival and a lower rate of treatment-related deaths although these differences were statistically non-significant. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding platinum-based and vs. cisplatin -based therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chen WW[ | PLoS One (2013) | Platinum-based vs. non platinum -based therapy | Platinum-based vs. old-generation agents: favor platinum-based therapy; Platinum-based vs. g new-generation agents: statistically similar. | RR: platinum-based vs. old-generation agents: favor platinum-based therapy; Platinum-based vs. g new-generation agents: statistically similar. | NA. | Hematological toxicity, non-hematological toxicity: higher in platinum-based regimens. Thrombocytopenia (only in platinum-based therapy vs. old-generation agents), nephrotoxicity (only in platinum-based therapy vs. new-generation agents), toxic death rate: statistically similar. | New-generation agent (S-1, taxanes and irinotecan) based combination regimens achieved similar RR and OS as platinum-based therapy that had generally higher side effects. S-1, taxanes and irinotecan seemed to be valid options for patients with inoperable, advanced gastric cancer as first-line chemotherapy. |
| Petrelli F[ | PLoS One (2013) | Chemotherapy with vs. without cisplatin | Favor therapy without cisplatin. | RR: favor therapy without cisplatin | PFS: favor therapy without cisplatin | NA. | New active cytotoxic agents instead of cisplatin significantly enhanced OS, PFS, and RR in first-line treatment of metastatic GC. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding targeted chemotherapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ciliberto D[ | Cancer Biol Ther (2015) | Targeted therapy vs. conventional therapy | Favor targeted therapy of anti-angiogenic and HER2 but not EGFR pathway | RR: favor anti-HER2 agents but not for anti-EGFR and anti-angiogenic agents. | PFS: favor targeted therapy of anti-angiogenic and HER2 but not EGFR pathway. | Diarrhea: higher in anti-HER2 agents. Rash: higher in anti-EGFR drugs. | Targeted therapy showed a significant survival benefit, which can be ascribed to anti-angiogenic and anti-HER2 agents. |
| Iacovelli R[ | PLoS One (2014) | Targeted therapy vs. BSC or traditional chemotherapy | OS: patients ECOG=0: statistically similar; targeted therapy vs. chemotherapy: favor chemotherapy. In patients with ECOG≥1: targeted therapy vs. BSC: favor targeted therapy; targeted therapy vs. chemotherapy: statistically similar; | NA. | NA. | NA. | In patients with ECOG-PS = 0, ramucirumab and everolimus did not report a significant survival benefit. Any active therapy over BSC was more effective on patients with ECOG-PS = 1 or more. Patients with symptomatic disease should not be immediately excluded by further lines of therapy. |
| Qi WX[ | Tumour Biol (2014) | Anti-VEGF agents vs. non anti-VEGF agents | Favor anti-VEGF therapy | Objective RR: favor anti-VEGF therapy | RFS: favor anti-VEGF therapy | Grade 3 or 4 thrombocytopenia, diarrhea, and hypertension: higher in anti-VEGF therapy | The anti-VEGF therapy offered a significant survival benefit in patients with AGC, especially for those previously treated patients. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding combination (doublet/triplet) therapy vs. single/doublet therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhang Y[ | Medicine (Baltimore) (2016) | Doublet combination therapy vs. single theapy | Favor doublet combination therapy (targeted agent+cytotoxic chemotherapy improved OS, but not for doublet cytotoxic chemotherapy) | Objective RR: favor doublet combination therapy | PFS: favor doublet combination therapy (also significant in targeted agent+ chemotherapy compared wth single cytotoxic agent). | Grade 3/4 myelosuppression, toxicities, diarrhea, fatigue: higher in doublet combination therapy; Grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia, nausea: statistically similar. | The addition of targeted agent to mono-chemotherapy as salvage treatment for pretreated AGC patients provided substantial survival benefits, while no significant survival benefits were observed in doublet cytotoxic chemotherapy regimens. |
| Liu N[ | Chin J Hos Pharm (2012) | Triplet chemotherapy vs. doublet chemotherapy | NA. | Overall RR: favor triplet combination chemotherapy. | NA. | Effectiveness: favor triplet combination chemotherapy; Grade 3/4 AEs: statistically similar; | Triplet chemotherapy was more effective for AGC patients compared to double chemotherapy, esp taxoid based triplet chemotherapy. |
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include combination vs. monotherapy) | Favor combination chemotherapy. | Objective RR: favor combination chemotherapy. | TTP: favor combination chemotherapy. | Toxicity: higher in combination chemotherapy. | Combination chemotherapy improved survival compared to single-agent therapy. |
| Wagner AD[ | J Clin Oncol (2006) | (Include combination vs. monotherapy) | Favor combination chemotherapy. | NA. | NA. | Toxicity: higher in combination therapy. Treatment related death: statistically similar. | Combination chemotherapy improved survival compared to single-agent therapy. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding FU/anthracycline/cisplatin combination therapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include 5-FU/ anthracycline-containing combination therapy with vs. without cisplatin). | Favor three-drug combination. | NA. | NA. | NA. | The comparisons confirmed a statistically significant advantage in overall survival for the three-drug combination though this benefit was achieved at the price of significant toxicity |
| Wagner AD[ | J Clin Oncol (2006) | (Include FU/ anthracycline-containing combination therapy with vs. without cisplatin). | Favor three-drug combination. | NA. | NA. | NA. | Best survival results were achieved with three-drug regimens containing FU, an anthracycline, and cisplatin. |
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include 5-FU/cisplatin-containing combination therapy regimens with vs. without anthracyclines). | Favor three-drug combination. | NA. | NA. | NA. | The comparisons confirmed a statistically significant advantage in overall survival for the three-drug combination though this benefit was achieved at the price of significant toxicity |
| Wagner AD[ | J Clin Oncol (2006) | (Include FU/cisplatin- containing regimens with vs. without anthracyclines). | Favor three-drug combination. | NA. | NA. | NA. | Best survival results were achieved with three-drug regimens containing FU, an anthracycline, and cisplatin. |
Findings of meta-analyses: An overview of included studies regarding docetaxel, lentinan and postoperative intravenous chemotherapy
| First Author | Journal (Year) | Comparisons | OS | RR | SR, DFS, RFS, PFS, Recurrence, TTF,TTP | Other | Major comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wagner AD[ | Cochrane Database Syst Rev (2010) | (Include docetaxel-containing vs. non docetaxel- containing regimens). | Statistically similar | Objective RR: statistically similar | TTP: statistically similar. | Treatment related death, treatment discontinuation due to toxicity: statistically similar. | The clinical value of docetaxel-containing regimen was regarded as controversial. |
| Oba K[ | Anticancer Res (2009) | Chemotherapy regimens with vs. without lentinan administration | Favor with lentinan combination therapy. | NA. | NA. | NA. | The addition of lentinan to standard chemotherapy offered a significant advantage over chemotherapy alone in terms of survival. |
| Zhang YL[ | Chin Gen Prac (2011) | EPIPC vs. early postoperative intravenous chemotherapy | NA. | NA. | SR: 1-, 2-, 3-, 5- y: favor EPIPC. Replase rate: 2-, 3-y intra-abdominal recurrence: favor EPIPC. | Nausea, vomiting: lower in EPIPC. Liver and renal function protection: favor EPIPC | EPIPC improved survival rate and reduced both recurrence rate and side effects. |