Literature DB >> 28572122

Chemotherapy for pulmonary large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas: does the regimen matter?

Jules L Derks1, Robert Jan van Suylen2, Erik Thunnissen3, Michael A den Bakker4,5, Harry J Groen6, Egbert F Smit7,8, Ronald A Damhuis9, Esther C van den Broek10, Ernst-Jan M Speel11,12, Anne-Marie C Dingemans13,12.   

Abstract

Pulmonary large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) is rare. Chemotherapy for metastatic LCNEC ranges from small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) regimens to nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) chemotherapy regimens. We analysed outcomes of chemotherapy treatments for LCNEC.The Netherlands Cancer Registry and Netherlands Pathology Registry (PALGA) were searched for patients with stage IV chemotherapy-treated LCNEC (2003-2012). For 207 patients, histology slides were available for pathology panel review. First-line platinum-based combined chemotherapy was clustered as "NSCLC-t", comprising gemcitabine, docetaxel, paclitaxel or vinorelbine; "NSCLC-pt", with pemetrexed treatment only; and "SCLC-t", consisting of etoposide chemotherapy.A panel review diagnosis of LCNEC was established in 128 out of 207 patients. NSCLC-t chemotherapy was administered in 46% (n=60), NSCLC-pt in 16% (n=20) and SCLC-t in 38% (n=48) of the patients. The median (95% CI) overall survival for NSCLC-t chemotherapy was 8.5 (7.0-9.9) months, significantly longer than patients treated with NSCLC-pt, with a median survival of 5.9 (5.0-6.9) months (hazard ratio 2.51, 95% CI 1.39-4.52; p=0.002) and patients treated with SCLC-t chemotherapy, with a median survival of 6.7 (5.0-8.5) months (hazard ratio 1.66, 95% CI 1.08-2.56; p=0.020).In patients with LCNEC, NSCLC-t chemotherapy results in longer overall survival compared to NSCLC-pt and SCLC-t chemotherapy.
Copyright ©ERS 2017.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28572122      PMCID: PMC5898951          DOI: 10.1183/13993003.01838-2016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Respir J        ISSN: 0903-1936            Impact factor:   16.671


Introduction

Pulmonary large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (LCNEC) is a subtype of lung cancer with neuroendocrine morphology, neuroendocrine differentiation on immunohistochemistry, a high mitotic rate (>10 mitosis·2 mm−2) and nonsmall cell cytological features [1]. LCNEC is rare and accounts for ∼3% of all lung cancers, but the proportion of lung cancers diagnosed as LCNEC appears to be increasing [2]. Because the histological features of LCNEC overlap with nonsmall cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) and occasionally with small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC), histological diagnosis can be difficult [3, 4]. Because of the difficulties in diagnosing LCNEC, and its rarity, the optimal systemic treatment has not been adequately established [5]. In the current European Society for Medical Oncology guidelines for NSCLC, no specific treatment for LCNEC is described [6]. In the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) guideline, either platinumetoposide chemotherapy treatment (SCLC type) or the same regimen as for nonsmall cell nonsquamous carcinoma (NSCLC type) is advised for LCNEC. However, SCLC-type chemotherapy is considered by expert opinion to be most appropriate [7]. Several observations suggest that LCNEC should respond best to a SCLC-type treatment. For instance, recent studies show that the genomic profile of LCNEC corresponds closely with SCLC [8, 9]. In addition, we reported that the prognosis and metastatic pattern at diagnosis of LCNEC significantly overlaps with SCLC [2, 10]. However, important differences in the response to SCLC-type chemotherapy treatment for LCNEC and SCLC have been reported [5]. Two single-arm phase II trials in LCNEC (n=29 and n=30) showed an objective response rate (ORR) for etoposide or irinotecan combined with cisplatin ranging from 31% to 47% [11, 12], substantially lower compared to SCLC phase III trials evaluating etoposidecisplatinum chemotherapy (ORR ≈66%) [13]. Because of the reported higher resistance to SCLC-type chemotherapy in LCNEC, some clinicians favour a NSCLC-type chemotherapy treatment. Because of these perceived differences, we investigated the chemotherapy treatment of patients with metastatic LCNEC in the Netherlands from 2003 to 2012. Furthermore, we retrospectively correlated the overall survival and progression free survival (PFS) with chemotherapy type in patients with a panel-reviewed histological diagnosis of LCNEC.

Material and methods

Data sources and ethical regulations

Data were retrieved from the Netherlands Cancer Registry and Netherlands Pathology Registry (PALGA, the nationwide registry of pathology in the Netherlands [14]). The study was performed according to the cancer registry and pathology registry guidelines and national privacy regulations and approved by the medical ethical committee of the Maastricht University Medical Center (METC azM/UM 14-4-043, November 20, 2014).

Patient selection

All patients with a diagnosis of stage IV LCNEC recorded in either the cancer registry or the pathology registry between January 1, 2003 and December 31, 2012 were included. To select LCNEC from the cancer registry the International Classifications of Disease – Oncology 3rd edition code M8013 was used. Previously we have observed that a wide range of diagnostic terms are used to describe LCNEC [15]. To identify additional LCNEC cases in the cancer registry that had been diagnosed with alternative nomenclature, the additional diagnostic codes M8246 (neuroendocrine carcinoma) and M8574 (NSCLC with neuroendocrine differentiation) were included. Digital summaries of pathology reports retrieved from the pathology registry were screened for the diagnosis of LCNEC, as previously reported [15]. Patients diagnosed with metastatic LCNEC, including patients with tumours diagnosed with a nomenclature possibly referring to LCNEC, treated by chemotherapy retrieved from either of the national databases, were included. Data on the type of chemotherapy treatment was retrospectively updated in 2015 by qualified cancer registry data managers. Patients were excluded if details on chemotherapy were unavailable. First, we analysed the type of chemotherapy in the selected patient study group (aim 1). We then performed a pathology review for all patients. Patients with a diagnosis based on cytology and patients for whom the original histopathological slides could not be retrieved were excluded. Overall survival and PFS were determined in patients with a panel-confirmed diagnosis of LCNEC (aim 2).

Data collection

Collected data included stage (tumour, node and metastasis (TNM) stage 6 or 7) and time from diagnosis to death or last follow-up censored for 36 months of overall survival. PFS was calculated from date of diagnosis until first evidence of progression, death or last day of follow-up. Treatment data included chemotherapy subtype, number of chemotherapy cycles and second-line treatment. First-line chemotherapy was clustered into three groups, as follows. 1) “NSCLC chemotherapy type” (NSCLC-t), consisting of gemcitabine, docetaxel, paclitaxel or vinorelbine; 2) “pemetrexed NSCLC type” (NSCLC-pt), with pemetrexed treatment only; and 3) “SCLC type” (SCLC-t), consisting of etoposide chemotherapy. The platinum components were either cisplatin or carboplatin. Metastatic sites at diagnosis were retrieved from documented clinical data (cTNM). Pathology data included pathology history, pathological specimen type and diagnosis according to the digital pathology report summary.

Pathology revision

Tumour histology slides were collected and included at least one immunohistochemical (IHC) neuroendocrine stain (CD56/NCAM, chromogranin-A or synaptophysin) and a haematoxylin and eosin stained slide. Review was performed by three pathologists (E. Thunnissen, R. van Sulyen and M. den Bakker), who were blinded for clinical outcome and original diagnosis. IHC staining patterns for neuroendocrine markers, cytokeratins, TTF1 and p63 and Ki-67 (if available) were assessed by J. Derks and R. van Sulyen prior to the central review meetings. The assessors evaluated haematoxylin and eosin slides at the multihead microscope; information on IHC expression patterns was provided (J. Derks). LCNEC was established when at least two pathologists agreed on the diagnosis, referred to as panel-consensus LCNEC. World Health Organization (WHO) 2015 criteria were evaluated for all panel-consensus established diagnoses. Additional detailed pathology review information can be found in the online supplementary pathology data file.

Statistical analysis

The Chi-squared and Fisher exact tests were used to compare categorical data. Continuous variables were tested using the Mann–Whitney U-test and the median and interquartile range (IQR) reported. Overall survival and PFS censoring took place at the closing date (February 1, 2014). Overall survival was estimated according to the Kaplan–Meier method and tested using the log-rank test. Multivariate Cox regression analysis was performed including covariates significant at univariate analysis. Nonproportionality was visually assessed by log minus log plots. Two-sided p-values <0.05 were considered significant. Analyses were performed using SPSS (version 22 for Windows; Chicago, IL, USA).

Results

Population-based changes in chemotherapy treatment over time

Data from 1627 patients from the cancer registry and 1172 patients from the pathology registry were retrieved. 355 patients had stage IV disease treated with chemotherapy. After excluding patients for whom details of chemotherapy treatment could not be retrieved, chemotherapy treatment was analysed in 294 patients (figure 1). A complete overview of retrieved diagnoses and chemotherapy treatment is presented in online supplementary table S1. NSCLC-t chemotherapy treatment in LCNEC significantly decreased over time from 59% (2003–2009) to 31% (2010–2012) (p<0.001); NSCLC-pt chemotherapy type increased from 10% to 16% (p=0.29); and the SCLC type increased from 31% to 53% (p=0.002).
FIGURE 1

CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) diagram showing inclusion of patients and the performed pathology review. LCNEC: large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; NSCLC NED: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma with immunohistochemically neuroendocrine differentiation; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma; NET NOS: neuroendocrine tumour not otherwise specified; OS: overall survival; PFS: progression-free survival.

CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) diagram showing inclusion of patients and the performed pathology review. LCNEC: large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; NSCLC NED: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma with immunohistochemically neuroendocrine differentiation; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma; NET NOS: neuroendocrine tumour not otherwise specified; OS: overall survival; PFS: progression-free survival.

Panel-consensus diagnosed LCNEC

Histopathological slides were retrieved from 207 patients. In 128 patients LCNEC was diagnosed by consensus, with 108 cases meeting all required WHO 2015 criteria (online supplementary table S2) [16]. Patients with a panel-confirmed LCNEC diagnosis (n=128) had a median age of 65 (56–71) years, 59% were male and 67% were diagnosed by a (core) needle biopsy specimen (table 1). Metastases in the liver (53%), bone (27%) and nonmediastinal lymph nodes (22%) were most common. Metastases confined to a single organ were present in 48% of patients. A minimum of four chemotherapy cycles (median (IQR) 4 (2–4)) were administered in 62% of patients. Second-line chemotherapy was administered in 23% of patients. Patients with more than three metastases in different organs more frequently received SCLC-t chemotherapy. Overall, NSCLC-t chemotherapy was administered in 46% of patients, mainly platinumgemcitabine (76% of NSCLC-t patients). NSCLC-pt and SCLC-t chemotherapy was administered in 16% and in 38% of patients, respectively. Characteristics of panel-consensus diagnosed LCNEC patients who fulfilled all required WHO criteria were not different and are described in online supplementary table S3.
TABLE 1

Clinical characteristics of patients with panel-consensus diagnosed large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma

Total cohortChemotherapy clustersp-value
NSCLC-tNSCLC-ptSCLC-tNSCLC-t versus NSCLC-ptNSCLC-t versus SCLC-t
Patients128 (100)60 (46)20 (16)48 (38)
Age years65 (56–71)64 (56–69)70 (57–74)63 (55–70)0.24#0.88#
Male75 (59)33 (55)12 (60)30 (63)0.700.43
Number of organs with metastases0.67¶,+0.012¶,+
 161 (48)29 (48)14 (70)18 (38)
 244 (34)24 (40)5 (25)15 (31)
 311 (9)2 (3)0 (0)9 (19)
 >312 (9)5 (8)1 (5)6 (13)
Organ metastases at diagnosis
 Bone34 (27)14 (23)5 (25)15 (31)0.880.34
 Liver68 (53)30 (50)10 (50)28 (58)1.000.39
 Brain17 (13)7 (12)2 (10)8 (17)0.570.81
 Adrenal gland21 (16)9 (15)2 (10)10 (21)0.570.43
 Lung16 (13)10 (17)2 (10)4 (8)0.470.20
 Pleura2 (2)1 (2)0 (0)1 (2)1.00+1.00+
 Lymph node28 (22)14 (23)4 (20)10 (21)0.760.76
Nonclustered subtype of chemotherapy
 Gemcitabine46 (36)46 (76)
 Paclitaxel7 (5)7 (12)
 Docetaxel6 (5)6 (10)
 Vinorelbine1 (1)1 (2)
 Etoposide48 (38)48 (100)
 Pemetrexed20 (16)20 (100)
Cycles of chemotherapy0.30§0.09§
 118 (14)6 (10)2 (10)10 (21)
 215 (12)5 (8)4 (20)6 (13)
 314 (11)6 (10)3 (15)5 (10)
 463 (49)30 (50)11 (55)22 (46)
 >416 (13)11 (18)0 (0)5 (10)
 Data missing2 (2)2 (3)0 (0)0 (0)
Additional chemotherapy
 Second-line29 (23)13 (22)4 (20)12 (25)0.880.68
 Third-line6 (5)3 (5)1 (5)2 (4)1.00+1.00+

Data are presented as n (%) or median (interquartile range), unless otherwise stated. Bold type represents statistical significance. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma; NSCLC-t: NSCLC cluster of gemcitabine, paclitaxel, docetaxel and vinorelbine chemotherapy; NSCLC-pt: NSCLC cluster of pemetrexed chemotherapy; SCLC-t: small cell lung carcinoma cluster of etoposide chemotherapy. #: Mann–Whitney U-test; ¶: compared ≤2 organ metastases with >2 organ metastases; +: Fisher exact test; §: compared ≤2 cycles versus ≥3 cycles of chemotherapy, excluding unknown cases.

Clinical characteristics of patients with panel-consensus diagnosed large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma Data are presented as n (%) or median (interquartile range), unless otherwise stated. Bold type represents statistical significance. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma; NSCLC-t: NSCLC cluster of gemcitabine, paclitaxel, docetaxel and vinorelbine chemotherapy; NSCLC-pt: NSCLC cluster of pemetrexed chemotherapy; SCLC-t: small cell lung carcinoma cluster of etoposide chemotherapy. #: Mann–Whitney U-test; ¶: compared ≤2 organ metastases with >2 organ metastases; +: Fisher exact test; §: compared ≤2 cycles versus ≥3 cycles of chemotherapy, excluding unknown cases.

Overall survival in panel-consensus diagnosed LCNEC by chemotherapy cluster

All but three patients died during the follow-up period. The median (95% CI) overall survival was 7.3 months (6.3–8.2 months). Patients treated with NSCLC-t chemotherapy had a median overall survival of 8.5 months (7.0–9.9 months), which was significantly longer than for patients treated with NSCLC-pt chemotherapy (5.9 months, 5.0–6.9 months; p=0.011), and significantly longer than patients treated with SCLC-t chemotherapy (6.7 months, 5.0–8.5 months; p=0.012) (figure 2a). In multivariate analysis, including the covariates significant at univariate analyses (sex, age, liver metastasis and number of organs with metastases at diagnosis) (online supplementary figure S2), results remained significant for NSCLC-t versus NSCLC-pt treatment (hazard ratio (HR) 2.51, 95% CI 1.39–4.52; p=0.002), and for NSCLC-t versus SCLC-t treatment (1.66, 1.08–2.56; p=0.020) (figure 3). Cisplatinum versus carboplatinum compounds did not have a significant effect on the treatment outcome data (online supplementary figure S3). Corresponding results for overall survival and PFS in 108 patients with LCNEC in whose tumour samples all WHO 2015 criteria were confirmed are described in online supplementary figures S3, S4 and S5.
FIGURE 2

Overall survival in panel-consensus diagnosed large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma patients compared for a) chemotherapy clusters and b) subtypes of chemotherapy (excluding vinorelbine). n=128. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma regimen; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma regimen.

FIGURE 3

Three multivariate models are presented for clustered chemotherapy, platinum–gemcitabine and platinum–paclitaxel chemotherapy in panel-consensus large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma. n=128. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma. #: excluding vinorelbine.

Overall survival in panel-consensus diagnosed large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma patients compared for a) chemotherapy clusters and b) subtypes of chemotherapy (excluding vinorelbine). n=128. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma regimen; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma regimen. Three multivariate models are presented for clustered chemotherapy, platinumgemcitabine and platinumpaclitaxel chemotherapy in panel-consensus large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma. n=128. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma. #: excluding vinorelbine.

Overall survival in panel-consensus LCNEC according to chemotherapy subtype

Patients treated with platinumgemcitabine chemotherapy had a median overall survival (95% CI) of 7.8 months (5.9–9.6 months), which was significantly longer than for platinumpemetrexed (5.9 months, 5.0–6.9 months; p=0.019) and for platinumetoposide chemotherapy (6.7 months, 5.0–8.5 months; p=0.035) (figure 2b). In multivariate analyses overall survival for gemcitabine was superior to pemetrexed chemotherapy (HR 2.39, 95% CI 1.31–4.35; p=0.004) and a strong trend was observed compared to etoposide (1.54, 0.97–2.43; p=0.066) (figure 3). Paclitaxel-treated patients had a median overall survival of 8.7 months (95% CI 2.7–14.7 months), significantly longer than for pemetrexed chemotherapy (p=0.034), and a strong trend was observed for etoposide chemotherapy (p=0.057) (figure 2b). In multivariate analysis paclitaxel showed superior overall survival compared to pemetrexed chemotherapy (HR 4.04, 95% CI 1.46–11.22; p=0.007) and etoposide chemotherapy treatment (HR 2.60, 95% CI 1.07–6.35; p=0.035) (figure 3).

PFS in panel-consensus LCNEC according to chemotherapy subtype

Data on PFS were available in 119 patients; all except one patient progressed or died during the study period. The median PFS (95% CI) was 4.7 months (4.2–5.3 months). Only NSCLC-pt chemotherapy treated patients had a significantly worse PFS (4.1 months, 3.8–4.5 months; p=0.040) compared to patients treated with NSCLC-pt chemotherapy (figure 4a). Patients treated with gemcitabine chemotherapy had a significantly longer PFS of 5.2 months (4.1–6.2 months) compared to patients treated with NSCLC-pt chemotherapy (p=0.034) (figure 4b). All other comparisons of specific subtypes of chemotherapy showed no significant differences in PFS.
FIGURE 4

Progression-free survival compared for a) chemotherapy clusters and b) subtypes of chemotherapy (excluding vinorelbine) in panel-consensus large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma. n=119. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma chemotherapy regimen; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma chemotherapy regimen.

Progression-free survival compared for a) chemotherapy clusters and b) subtypes of chemotherapy (excluding vinorelbine) in panel-consensus large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma. n=119. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma chemotherapy regimen; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma chemotherapy regimen.

Discussion

Patients treated with doublet combined chemotherapy for metastatic LCNEC have a poor survival and the optimal chemotherapy treatment for LCNEC remains unascertained. Here we report that patients treated with NSCLC-t chemotherapy, mainly gemcitabine, have superior overall survival compared with patients treated with NSCLC-pt chemotherapy. In addition, the combination of NSCLC-t regimens, excluding those containing pemetrexed, showed superior survival compared with etoposide (SCLC-t) chemotherapy. These results contrast with the advised treatment in the ASCO guideline [7]. Chemotherapy treatment for patients with LCNEC changed significantly between 2003 and 2012 in the Netherlands, with a decrease in NSCLC-t chemotherapy and an increase in SCLC-t chemotherapy. This observation corresponds with data accrued from a 2014 questionnaire survey circulated among 21 Dutch pulmonary physicians. In this survey the majority of physicians (80%) would treat LCNEC with SCLC chemotherapy (online supplementary figure S6). We were unable to find specific explanations why the treatment of LCNEC has changed. Treatment preferences may have been influenced by a study published in 2005 describing the favourable response of LCNEC to SCLC-type chemotherapy [17]. Several studies have evaluated chemotherapy in LCNEC, but the reported studies are heterogeneous in case selection and confirmation of the pathology diagnosis (table 2). Two phase II trials, both with pathology review, have been reported. A European trial [11] reported a median overall survival of 8.0 months (95% CI 3.7–7.9 months), a PFS of 5.0 months (95% CI 4.0–7.9 months) and an ORR of 34% in 29 patients treated with platinumetoposide chemotherapy. In a Japanese trial [12], a median overall survival of 12.6 (95% CI 9.3–16.0) months, PFS of 5.8 (95% CI 3.8–7.8) months and an ORR of 47% was reported for treatment with platinumirinotecan (n=30). In retrospectively evaluated cohorts of LCNEC patients, the reported ORR for platinumetoposide chemotherapy ranged from 37% to 73% and overall survival ranged from 8.4 to 16.5 months [17-20]. Treatment outcomes for SCLC- and NSCLC-type chemotherapy for LCNEC has previously been evaluated; 27 patients showed an improved survival for platinumetoposide chemotherapy compared to a combination of NSCLC regimens [17]. Conversely, evaluation of an additional 26 patients showed a significantly lower overall survival for platinumetoposide chemotherapy compared to a combination of NSCLC regimens [19]. Because NSCLC regimens are frequently combined for analysis, there is a lack of data on subtype-specific overall survival and PFS. The reported ORRs for platinum combined with gemcitabine, docetaxel and paclitaxel are 41% (n=17), 77% (n=9) and 81% (n=11), respectively [18, 21].
TABLE 2

Overview of response to chemotherapy in advanced-stage large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma disease

First author [reference]DesignPanel review (pathologists n)Inclusion periodNSCLC chemotherapySCLC chemotherapy
Patients nORR %OS monthsPatients nORR %OS months
Le Treut [11]PYes (?)2004–200929348.0
Niho [12]PYes (6)2005–2011304712.6
Metro [20]RNo revisionUnclear37438.4
Naidoo [19]RYes (3)2006–201311#0#19.526378.3
Sun [18]RYes (?)2001–201034+509.2117316.5
Rossi [17]RYes (3)1990–200415021125051
Fujiwara [21]RNo (1)1999–20069§771346
Derks (present study)RYes (3)2003–201260 (NSCLC)8.548336.7
20 (pemetrexed-NSCLC)5.9

Studies including patients treated with chemoradiotherapy are not shown. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma; ORR: objective response rate; OS: overall survival; P: prospective; R: retrospective. #: four patients were evaluated according to response evaluation criteria in solid tumours (RECIST), including temozolomide (n=2), pemetrexed (n=1) and platinum combined with everolimus (n=1); ¶: 19 patients were evaluated according to RECIST criteria; +: including gemcitabine–platinum (n=17), taxane–platinum (n=4), tyrosine kinase inhibitor (n=2) and other platinum (n=11); §: taxane combined with platinum (n=7), taxane monotherapy (n=1) and platinum–vinorelbine (n=1).

Overview of response to chemotherapy in advanced-stage large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma disease Studies including patients treated with chemoradiotherapy are not shown. NSCLC: nonsmall cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma; ORR: objective response rate; OS: overall survival; P: prospective; R: retrospective. #: four patients were evaluated according to response evaluation criteria in solid tumours (RECIST), including temozolomide (n=2), pemetrexed (n=1) and platinum combined with everolimus (n=1); ¶: 19 patients were evaluated according to RECIST criteria; +: including gemcitabineplatinum (n=17), taxane–platinum (n=4), tyrosine kinase inhibitor (n=2) and other platinum (n=11); §: taxane combined with platinum (n=7), taxane monotherapy (n=1) and platinumvinorelbine (n=1). Platinumpemetrexed chemotherapy is advised as first-line treatment in patients with metastatic nonsquamous NSCLC [7]. However, platinumpemetrexed chemotherapy showed inferior results compared to platinumetoposide in SCLC [22], a tumour biologically closely related to LCNEC. The poor therapeutic response of pemetrexed may be due to the reported high expression of the thymidylate synthesis (TS) gene in LCNEC. Increased TS expression is suggested to be related to resistance to pemetrexed therapy [23-25]. The increased tendency for pemetrexed resistance coupled with the reported clinical observations suggest that pemetrexed should not be used in patients with LCNEC. Molecular changes in LCNEC and SCLC have been described. SCLC is characterised by RB1 and TP53 gene mutations, whereas LCNEC was characterised by mutually exclusive RB1 and TP53 gene inactivation versus a combination of STK11/KRAS/KEAP1 gene mutations [9, 26]. In future studies it would be of interest to analyse these patterns to investigate whether the molecular background corresponds with responses to different chemotherapy regimens [9]. This study has several limitations. First, it is a retrospective study and chemotherapy data could not be retrieved in all patients. However, the exclusion of patients was random and not by selection, as evidenced by the similar overall survival and age range of excluded patients compared to the analysed patient cohort (online supplementary tables S4 and S5). Second, information on WHO performance score was lacking, and this may have confounded reported overall survival. We observed no differences in overall survival for treatment with cisplatinum or carboplatinum chemotherapy (online supplementary figure S2). Third, completion of chemotherapy cycles differed slightly between the NSCLC-t and SCLC-t treatments. Nevertheless, up to 62% of patients completed four or more cycles of chemotherapy and this was not significantly different between treatment groups. Fourth, the reported overall survival for chemotherapy-treated subtypes may have been confounded by strong therapeutic effects of second-line treatment. However, in the presented cohort the frequency of second-line treatment was relatively low (23%) and not statistically different among clustered chemotherapy subtypes (table 1). The frequency of second-line treatment is lower than reported in a Japanese phase II trial (86%) [12], but not much lower than reported for daily clinical practice in lung cancer (32%) [27]. Finally, data on PFS were obtained retrospectively and could not be formally evaluated by the RECIST (response evaluation criteria in solid tumours) criteria, as this was analysed in a real-world setting and not in a clinical trial. Response evaluation was not standardised and incomplete in 40% of patients; therefore, these data are not reported. In conclusion, we present the largest series of patients with pathology-reviewed metastatic LCNEC to date, and show that NSCLC-t regimens, mainly platinumgemcitabine chemotherapy, are superior to platinumpemetrexed and platinumetoposide treatment. These results need prospective evaluation, ideally in a randomised trial, in centrally confirmed LCNEC. Please note: supplementary material is not edited by the Editorial Office, and is uploaded as it has been supplied by the author. Supplementary pathology data ERJ-01838-2016_Supplementary_pathology_data Supplementary clinical data ERJ-01838-2016_Supplementary_clinical_data Supplementary figure S1. Univariate analysis of covariates for overall survival in panel-consensus LCNEC (N=128). LCNEC: large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; NSCLC: non-small cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma. ERJ-01838-2016_Figure_S1 Supplementary figure S2. Overall survival for panel-consensus LCNEC (N=128) according to treatment by cisplatinum or carboplatinum doublet chemotherapy. ERJ-01838-2016_Figure_S2 Supplementary figure S3. Overall survival in LCNEC for which all WHO 2015 criteria were evaluable (N=108) compared for the chemotherapy clusters (A) and for subtypes of chemotherapy (B). Progression free survival compared for the chemotherapy clusters (C) and for subtypes of chemotherapy (D) (N=101). * Excluded Vinorelbine. LCNEC: large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; SCLC-t: small cell lung carcinoma chemotherapy regimen of platinum-etoposide; NSCLC-t: non-small cell lung carcinoma chemotherapy regimen cluster of platinum and gemcitabine, paclitaxel, docetaxel or vinorelbine; NSCLC-pt: NSCLC regimen of platinum-pemetrexed. ERJ-01838-2016_Figure_S3 Supplementary figure S4. Univariate analysis of covariates for overall survival in panel-consensus LCNEC for which all WHO 2015 criteria were evaluable (N=108). LCNEC: large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; NSCLC: non-small cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma; WHO: World Health Organization. * Excluded for multivariate analyses due to small effect size. ERJ-01838-2016_Figure_S4 Supplementary figure S5. Multivariate analysis of overall survival in panel-consensus LCNEC for which all WHO 2015 criteria were evaluable (N=108). LCNEC: large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; NSCLC: non-small cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma; WHO: World Health Organization. ERJ-01838-2016_Figure_S5 Supplementary figure S6. Overview of a questionnaire survey among Dutch physicians (N=21) on favoured first-line treatment in a patient diagnosed with stage IV LCNEC disease based on liver metastases. This questionnaire was circulated during an educational lung cancer meeting “Wengen op de Wadden 2014”. LCNEC: large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma; NSCLC: non-small cell lung carcinoma; SCLC: small cell lung carcinoma. ERJ-01838-2016_Figure_S6
  25 in total

1.  Effect of platinum combined with irinotecan or paclitaxel against large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the lung.

Authors:  Yutaka Fujiwara; Ikuo Sekine; Koji Tsuta; Yuichiro Ohe; Hideo Kunitoh; Noboru Yamamoto; Hiroshi Nokihara; Kazuhiko Yamada; Tomohide Tamura
Journal:  Jpn J Clin Oncol       Date:  2007-07-24       Impact factor: 3.019

Review 2.  Carboplatin- or cisplatin-based chemotherapy in first-line treatment of small-cell lung cancer: the COCIS meta-analysis of individual patient data.

Authors:  Antonio Rossi; Massimo Di Maio; Paolo Chiodini; Robin Michael Rudd; Hiroaki Okamoto; Dimosthenis Vasilios Skarlos; Martin Früh; Wendi Qian; Tomohide Tamura; Epaminondas Samantas; Taro Shibata; Francesco Perrone; Ciro Gallo; Cesare Gridelli; Olga Martelli; Siow-Ming Lee
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2012-04-02       Impact factor: 44.544

3.  Differential Thymidylate Synthase Expression in Different Variants of Large-Cell Carcinoma of the Lung.

Authors:  Valentina Monica; Giorgio V Scagliotti; Paolo Ceppi; Luisella Righi; Alberto Cambieri; Marco Lo Iacono; Silvia Saviozzi; Marco Volante; Silvia Novello; Mauro Papotti
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2009-12-15       Impact factor: 12.531

4.  Pemetrexed Plus Cisplatin Versus Gemcitabine Plus Cisplatin According to Thymidylate Synthase Expression in Nonsquamous Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer: A Biomarker-Stratified Randomized Phase II Trial.

Authors:  Jong-Mu Sun; Jin Seok Ahn; Sin-Ho Jung; Jiyu Sun; Sang Yun Ha; Joungho Han; Keunchil Park; Myung-Ju Ahn
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2015-06-29       Impact factor: 44.544

5.  Next-Generation Sequencing of Pulmonary Large Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma Reveals Small Cell Carcinoma-like and Non-Small Cell Carcinoma-like Subsets.

Authors:  Natasha Rekhtman; Maria C Pietanza; Matthew D Hellmann; Jarushka Naidoo; Arshi Arora; Helen Won; Darragh F Halpenny; Hangjun Wang; Shaozhou K Tian; Anya M Litvak; Paul K Paik; Alexander E Drilon; Nicholas Socci; John T Poirier; Ronglai Shen; Michael F Berger; Andre L Moreira; William D Travis; Charles M Rudin; Marc Ladanyi
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2016-03-09       Impact factor: 12.531

6.  The Use of Immunohistochemistry Improves the Diagnosis of Small Cell Lung Cancer and Its Differential Diagnosis. An International Reproducibility Study in a Demanding Set of Cases.

Authors:  Erik Thunnissen; Alain C Borczuk; Douglas B Flieder; Birgit Witte; Mary Beth Beasley; Jin-Haeng Chung; Sanja Dacic; Sylvie Lantuejoul; Prudence A Russell; Michael den Bakker; Johan Botling; Elisabeth Brambilla; Erienne de Cuba; Kim R Geisinger; Kenzo Hiroshima; Alberto M Marchevsky; Yuko Minami; Andre Moreira; Andrew G Nicholson; Akihiko Yoshida; Ming-Sound Tsao; Arne Warth; Edwina Duhig; Gang Chen; Yoshihiro Matsuno; William D Travis; Kelly Butnor; Wendy Cooper; Mari Mino-Kenudson; Noriko Motoi; Claudia Poleri; Giuseppe Pelosi; Keith Kerr; Seena C Aisner; Yuichi Ishikawa; Reinhard H Buettner; Naoto Keino; Yasushi Yatabe; Masayuki Noguchi
Journal:  J Thorac Oncol       Date:  2016-12-18       Impact factor: 15.609

7.  Role of chemotherapy and the receptor tyrosine kinases KIT, PDGFRalpha, PDGFRbeta, and Met in large-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the lung.

Authors:  Giulio Rossi; Alberto Cavazza; Alessandro Marchioni; Lucia Longo; Mario Migaldi; Giuliana Sartori; Nazzarena Bigiani; Laura Schirosi; Christian Casali; Uliano Morandi; Nicola Facciolongo; Antonio Maiorana; Mario Bavieri; Leonardo M Fabbri; Elisabeth Brambilla
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2005-12-01       Impact factor: 44.544

8.  A Population-Based Analysis of Application of WHO Nomenclature in Pathology Reports of Pulmonary Neuroendocrine Tumors.

Authors:  Jules L Derks; Robert Jan van Suylen; Erik Thunnissen; Michael A den Bakker; Egbert F Smit; Harry J M Groen; Ernst J M Speel; Anne-Marie C Dingemans
Journal:  J Thorac Oncol       Date:  2016-01-09       Impact factor: 15.609

9.  Multicentre phase II study of cisplatin-etoposide chemotherapy for advanced large-cell neuroendocrine lung carcinoma: the GFPC 0302 study.

Authors:  J Le Treut; M C Sault; H Lena; P J Souquet; A Vergnenegre; H Le Caer; H Berard; S Boffa; I Monnet; D Damotte; C Chouaid
Journal:  Ann Oncol       Date:  2013-02-13       Impact factor: 32.976

10.  Phase III study of pemetrexed plus carboplatin compared with etoposide plus carboplatin in chemotherapy-naive patients with extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Mark A Socinski; Egbert F Smit; Paul Lorigan; Kartik Konduri; Martin Reck; Aleksandra Szczesna; Johnetta Blakely; Piotr Serwatowski; Nina A Karaseva; Tudor Ciuleanu; Jacek Jassem; Mircea Dediu; Shengyan Hong; Carla Visseren-Grul; Axel-Rainer Hanauske; Coleman K Obasaju; Susan C Guba; Nick Thatcher
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2009-08-31       Impact factor: 44.544

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  32 in total

1.  PD-L1-expression patterns in large-cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of the lung: potential implications for use of immunotherapy in these patients: the GFPC 03-2017 "EPNEC" study.

Authors:  Dominique Arpin; Marie-Christine Charpentier; Marie Bernardi; Isabelle Monnet; Aurelie Boni; Emmanuel Watkin; Isabelle Goubin-Versini; Régine Lamy; Laurence Gérinière; Margaux Geier; Fabien Forest; Radj Gervais; Anne Madrosyk; Florian Guisier; Cécile Serrand; Chrystèle Locher; Chantal Decroisette; Pierre Fournel; Jean-Bernard Auliac; Thierry Jeanfaivre; Jacques Letreut; Hélène Doubre; Geraldine Francois; Nicolas Piton; Christos Chouaïd; Diane Damotte
Journal:  Ther Adv Med Oncol       Date:  2020-07-07       Impact factor: 8.168

2.  Isolated adrenocorticotropic hormone deficiency as a form of paraneoplastic syndrome.

Authors:  Hironori Bando; Genzo Iguchi; Keitaro Kanie; Hitoshi Nishizawa; Ryusaku Matsumoto; Yasunori Fujita; Yukiko Odake; Kenichi Yoshida; Kentaro Suda; Hidenori Fukuoka; Keiko Tanaka; Wataru Ogawa; Yutaka Takahashi
Journal:  Pituitary       Date:  2018-10       Impact factor: 4.107

Review 3.  Advances on systemic treatment for lung neuroendocrine neoplasms.

Authors:  Nikolaos Tsoukalas; Panagiotis Baxevanos; Eleni Aravantinou-Fatorou; Maria Tolia; Michail Galanopoulos; Konstantinos Tsapakidis; George Kyrgias; Christos Toumpanakis; Gregory Kaltsas
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2018-04

4.  Role of Immunotherapy in Stage IV Large Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma of the Lung.

Authors:  Takefumi Komiya; Neema Ravindra; Emily Powell
Journal:  Asian Pac J Cancer Prev       Date:  2021-02-01

Review 5.  Multiple faces of pulmonary large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma: update with a focus on practical approach to diagnosis.

Authors:  Marina K Baine; Natasha Rekhtman
Journal:  Transl Lung Cancer Res       Date:  2020-06

6.  Small or Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Based Therapy for Treatment of Large Cell Neuroendocrine Cancer of The Lung? University of Cincinnati Experience.

Authors:  Ihab Eldessouki; Ola Gaber; Tariq Namad; Jiang Wang; John C Morris; Nagla Abdel Karim
Journal:  J Oncol       Date:  2018-11-01       Impact factor: 4.375

7.  Large Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma Shares Similarity with Small Cell Carcinoma on the Basis of Clinical and Pathological Features.

Authors:  Fengkai Xu; Ke Chen; Chunlai Lu; Jie Gu; Haiying Zeng; Yifan Xu; Yuan Ji; Di Ge
Journal:  Transl Oncol       Date:  2019-02-25       Impact factor: 4.243

8.  Clinicopathological characteristics and prognostic factors of pulmonary large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma: A large population-based analysis.

Authors:  Qiao Yang; Zihan Xu; Xiewan Chen; Linpeng Zheng; Yongxin Yu; Xianlan Zhao; Mingjing Chen; Bangyu Luo; Jianmin Wang; Jianguo Sun
Journal:  Thorac Cancer       Date:  2019-02-07       Impact factor: 3.500

9.  Outcomes of Patients with Clinical Stage I-IIIA Large-Cell Neuroendocrine Lung Cancer Treated with Resection.

Authors:  Anna Lowczak; Agnieszka Kolasinska-Cwikla; Jarosław B Ćwikła; Karolina Osowiecka; Jakub Palucki; Robert Rzepko; Lidka Glinka; Anna Doboszyńska
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2020-05-07       Impact factor: 4.241

10.  Comprehensive Dissection of Treatment Patterns and Outcome for Patients With Metastatic Large-Cell Neuroendocrine Lung Carcinoma.

Authors:  David Fisch; Farastuk Bozorgmehr; Daniel Kazdal; Jonas Kuon; Laura V Klotz; Rajiv Shah; Florian Eichhorn; Mark Kriegsmann; Marc A Schneider; Thomas Muley; Albrecht Stenzinger; Helge Bischoff; Petros Christopoulos
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2021-07-08       Impact factor: 6.244

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