| Literature DB >> 32266105 |
Xiang Wang1, Junyan Yu2, Mudan Yang3, Likun Liu4, Jinghua Gao5, Yuchuan Ren6, Ruixing Zhang7, Diansheng Zhong8, Nan Du9, Zhanzhao Fu10, Junmei Jia11, Qingshan Li12, Jianfeng Diao13, Junping Zhang14, Jun Guo15, Xiaomei Li16, Xiang Song17, Yan Zhang18, Zhonghe Yu19, Liwen Ma20, Zaiwen Fan21, Zheng Liu22, Guozhong Li23, Feng Liang24, Huaqing Wang25, Yunge Gao26, Ping Yang27, Chunmei Bai1, Aimin Zang28, Xiubao Ren29.
Abstract
Apatinib, a VEGFR2 receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor, showed survival benefits in Asian patients with heavily pretreated advanced gastric cancer. However, the adverse event (AEs) profile of apatinib has limited its use. Dosing schedules are used to alleviate toxicities despite no supportive evidence. This study aimed to analyze the toxicity and effectiveness of apatinib alone, especially with different dosing strategies in advanced gastric cancer patients under a real-world setting. Data from the subpopulation of patients who failed ≥2 chemotherapy regimens enrolled in the AHEAD-G202 trial were analyzed. The primary endpoint was safety. The secondary endpoints were overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS). Totally 120 patients were included into three groups by the initial daily doses: 43 (35.8%) patients in the low-dose (250 mg) group, 67 (55.8%) patients in the mid-dose (425 mg to 500 mg) group, and 10 (8.3%) patients in the high-dose (675 to 850 mg) group. Grade 3/4 treatment-emergent AEs were infrequent (<5%), with the most commonly reported grade 3/4 AEs being hand-foot syndrome (4.2%), hypertension (4.2%,), fatigue (4.2%), and difficulty in swallowing (4.2%) which gradually decreased among the high-, mid-, and low-dose groups. The median OS and PFS were 6.33 months (95% CI, 4.57-7.73) and 3.83 months (95% CI: 1.40-4.20), respectively and were comparable among the three doses groups. We found heavily pretreated advanced gastric cancer patients can tolerate and benefit from lower-doses of apatinib therapy. The lower initial daily dosing strategy represents an alternative approach for optimizing apatinib dosing in clinical practice. AJCREntities:
Keywords: Apatinib; advanced gastric cancer; dosing strategy; effectiveness; real-world; toxicity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32266105 PMCID: PMC7136926
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Cancer Res ISSN: 2156-6976 Impact factor: 6.166