| Literature DB >> 29736168 |
Deaglan J McHugh1, Darren R Feldman1,2.
Abstract
The majority of metastatic germ cell tumors (GCTs) are cured with cisplatin-based chemotherapy, but 20-30% of patients will relapse after first-line chemotherapy and require additional salvage strategies. The two major salvage approaches in this scenario are high-dose chemotherapy (HDCT) with autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT) or conventional-dose chemotherapy (CDCT). Both CDCT and HDCT have curative potential in the management of relapsed/refractory GCT. However, due to a lack of conclusive randomized trials, it remains unknown whether sequential HDCT or CDCT represents the optimal initial salvage approach, with practice varying between tertiary institutions. This represents the most pressing question remaining for defining GCT treatment standards and optimizing outcomes. The authors review prognostic factors in the initial salvage setting as well as the major studies assessing the efficacy of CDCT, HDCT, or both, describing the strengths and weaknesses that formed the rationale behind the ongoing international phase III "TIGER" trial.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29736168 PMCID: PMC5874975 DOI: 10.1155/2018/7272541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Urol ISSN: 1687-6369
Prospective studies examining the use of initial salvage conventional-dose chemotherapy.
| Author (year) | N | CDCT Regimen(s) | Notable inclusion or exclusion criteria | EP/BEP as first-line therapy | CR/PR to first-line therapy | IR to first-line therapy | CR | Median f/u (months) | Durable remission |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McCaffrey et al. [ | 56 | VeIP or VIP | None | 53% | 36% | 64% | 36% | 52 | 23% |
| Loehrerr et al. [ | 135 | VeIP | Cisplatin-refractory patients excludeda | 100% | 100% | 0% | 50% | 72b | 24% |
| Kondagunta et al. [ | 46 | TIP | Included only patients with CR- or PR-negative marker to first line, gonadal primary, and <6 cycles of cisplatin in first line | 74% | 100% | 0% | 70% | 69 | 63% |
| Fizazi et al. [ | 37 | GIP | Included only patients with CR or PR-negative marker to first line, gonadal primary, and <6 cycles of cisplatin in first line | 86% | 100% | 0% | 54% | 53 | 51% |
CDCT, conventional-dose chemotherapy; EP, etoposide plus cisplatin; BEP; bleomycin, etoposide, and cisplatin; IR; incomplete response; CR, complete response; f/u, follow-up; VIP, etoposide, ifosfamide, and cisplatin; VeIP, vinblastine, ifosfamide, and cisplatin; GIP, gemcitabine, ifosfamide, and cisplatin; aprogression at <3 weeks after completion of first-line chemotherapy; bminimal (not median) follow-up.
Studies examining the use of high-dose chemotherapy as initial (or later) salvage therapy.
| Author (Year) | Study design | N | Notable I/E criteria | Median f/u (m) | HDCT as initial salvage | HDCT regimen | Cycles | Durable CR | OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Einhorn et al. [ | Retrospective | 184 | I: None | 48 | 73% | Carboplatin 700 mg/m2 (d 1–3) | 2 | 58% 2-year DFS | 65% at 5 years |
| Feldman et al. [ | Prospective, phase I/II | 107 | I: ≥1 adverse prognostic feature for salvage CDCTa | 61 | 76% | Part A (TI): Paclitaxel 200 mg/m2 (d 1) | 2 | 48% 5-year DFS | 52% at 5 years |
| Part B (CE): Carboplatin AUC 7-8 (d 1–3) Etoposide 400 mg/m2 (d 1–3) | 3 | ||||||||
| Lorch et al. [ | Prospective, randomized phase III | 211 | I: None | 90 | 86% | Arm A: VIP | 1 | 52% 2-year PFS | 50% at 5 years |
| Carboplatin 500 mg/m2 (d 1–3) | 3 | ||||||||
| Arm B: VIP | 3 | 47% 2-year PFS | 40% at 5 years | ||||||
| Carboplatin 550 mg/m2 (d 1–4) | 1 | ||||||||
| Adra et al. [ | Retrospective | 364 | I: None | 40 | 83% | Carboplatin 700 mg/m2 (d 1–3) | 2 | 60% 2-year PFS | 66% at 2 years |
I, inclusion; E, exclusion; HDCT, high-dose chemotherapy; f/u, follow-up; m, months; CR, complete response; OS, overall survival; PM-NSGCT, primary mediastinal nonseminomatous germ cell tumor; d, day; DFS, disease-free survival; AUC, area under the curve; PFS, progression-free survival; VIP, etoposide, ifosfamide, and cisplatin; aextragonadal primary site, incomplete response (IR) to first-line therapy, and PD after a salvage CDCT (cisplatin plus ifosfamide-based) regimen.
Studies comparing the use of conventional-dose chemotherapy with high-dose chemotherapy as initial salvage therapy.
| Author (Year) | Study design | Notable I/E criteria | Treatment regimen | NCDCT versus HDCT | Median f/u | PFS/EFS | OS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beyer et al. [ | Retrospective matched-pair analysisa | I: NSGCT only | CDCT: Any | 55b | 7.5y & 9yc | HR 0.72–0.84d | HR 0.77–0.83d |
| Pico et al. [ | Phase III randomized (IT-94) | I: none | CDCT: VIP or VeIP × 4 | 128 | 45 months | 35% at 3y | 47% |
| Lorch et al. [ | Retrospective, including IPFSG subgroup analyses | I: ≥3 cycles of EP-based CT | CDCT: Any | 773 | 58 months | HR 0.44d | HR 0.65d |
I, inclusion; E, exclusion; CDCT, conventional-dose chemotherapy; HDCT, high-dose chemotherapy; f/u, follow-up; PFS, progression-free survival; EFS, event-free survival; OS, overall survival; NSGCT, nonseminomatous germ cell tumor; VIP, etoposide, ifosfamide, and cisplatin; ICE, ifosfamide, carboplatin, and etoposide; y, years; HR, hazard ratio; CarboPEC, carboplatin, etoposide, and cyclophosphamide; IPFSG, International Prognostic Factor Study Group; amatching factors: primary tumor location, response to first-line treatment, duration of response, HCG and AFP levels; bfifty-five pairs of patients had full matches on >4 of 5 factors; cmedian follow-up for patients treated at Medical Research Council and Munich, respectively; dhazard ratio(s) favoring HDCT; eprogression within 4 weeks of the first-line cisplatin-based regimen.
Figure 1Study design of the TIGER trial (Alliance 0311012; EORTC 1407). POD, progression of disease; HDCT/ASCT, high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplant; TIP, paclitaxel, ifosfamide, and cisplatin; TI-CE, paclitaxel and ifosfamide followed by high-dose carboplatin and etoposide; IPFSG, International Prognostic Factors Study Group; PFS, progression-free survival; response rate; CR, complete response; PR-m, partial response with normal tumor markers; TRM, treatment-related mortality; QOL, quality of life.