| Literature DB >> 32274145 |
Damian von Eiff1,2, Farastuk Bozorgmehr1,2, Inn Chung1,2, Denise Bernhardt3,4, Stefan Rieken3,4, Stephan Liersch5, Thomas Muley2,6, Sonja Kobinger6, Michael Thomas1,2, Petros Christopoulos1,2, Martin Steins1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Etoposide-/platinum-based chemotherapy is the standard first-line treatment for extensive-disease small cell lung cancer (SCLC), but responses are short-lived and subsequent options limited. Here, we present our experience with paclitaxel in advanced treatment lines.Entities:
Keywords: Small cell lung cancer (SCLC); paclitaxel; progressive disease (PD)
Year: 2020 PMID: 32274145 PMCID: PMC7139030 DOI: 10.21037/jtd.2019.12.74
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thorac Dis ISSN: 2072-1439 Impact factor: 2.895
Figure 1Patient selection criteria of patients included in this study. 220 patients treated with paclitaxel at Thoraxklinik at Heidelberg University Hospital between 2005 and 2015 were retrospectively reviewed. In total, 35 patients were excluded either due to mixed histology, insufficient data availability or presence of another primary tumor. 185 patients were eligible for analysis. SCLC, small cell lung cancer.
Patient characteristics (N=185)
| Variable | n | % |
|---|---|---|
| Sex | ||
| Male | 119 | 64 |
| Female | 66 | 36 |
| Age | ||
| <65 years | 87 | 47 |
| ≥65 years | 98 | 53 |
| ECOG | ||
| 0 | 25 | 13.5 |
| 1 | 122 | 66 |
| 2 | 38 | 20.5 |
| Stage of disease at diagnosis | ||
| LD | 90 | 49 |
| ED | 95 | 51 |
| Number of metastatic sites at start of paclitaxel therapy | ||
| No metastases | 17 | 9 |
| 1 organ system | 52 | 28 |
| >1 organ system | 116 | 63 |
| Metastases according to location | ||
| Non-hepatic/non-cerebral | 44 | 24 |
| Hepatic metastases [hepatic only and hepatic and other organ (except brain)] | 68 | 37 |
| Cerebral metastases [cerebral only and cerebral and other organ (except liver)] | 25 | 13.5 |
| Hepatic and cerebral metastases | 31 | 17 |
| Smoking history | ||
| Unknown | 11 | 6 |
| No | 2 | 1.1 |
| Yes | 172 | 93 |
| Ongoing | 78 | 42 |
| <6 months cessation | 35 | 19 |
| >6 months cessation | 57 | 31 |
| Unknown | 2 | 1 |
Lines of chemotherapy*
| Chemotherapy regimen | 1st line | 2nd line | 3rd line | 4th line | 5th line | 6th line and beyond (n=22; 12%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Platinum/etoposide | 174 | 19 | 1 | 7 | 10 | 2 |
| Vincristine/etoposide | 9 | 2 | 1 | 1 | ||
| Clinical trial | 2 | |||||
| Topotecan | 131 | 39 | 4 | 3 | ||
| ACO | 17 | 71 | 21 | 4 | 1 | |
| Paclitaxel | 12 | 61 | 89 | 22 | 2# | |
| Amrubicin | 5 | |||||
| Vincristine | 1 | |||||
| Adriamycin/vincristine | 1 | |||||
| Trofosfamide | 11 | 23 | 13 | |||
| Pemetrexed | 1 | |||||
| Doxorubicin | 1 | |||||
| Gemcitabine | 1 | 2 | ||||
| Etoposide | 1 |
*, re-challenges with the same chemotherapy regimen were considered a subsequent line of therapy; #, paclitaxel in combination with carboplatin (this case was not included in paclitaxel analysis).
Characteristics of paclitaxel therapy (N=185)
| Variable | n | % |
|---|---|---|
| Therapy line | ||
| 1 | 0 | 0 |
| 2 | 12 | 6.5 |
| 3 | 61 | 33 |
| 4 | 89 | 48 |
| 5 | 22 | 12 |
| 6 | 1 | 0.5 |
| Dose reduction | ||
| No dose reduction | 134 | 72 |
| <25% | 22 | 12 |
| ≥25% | 29 | 16 |
| Time point of dose reduction (n=51) | ||
| First cycle | 44 | 86 |
| Second cycle | 4 | 8 |
| Third cycle | 1 | 2 |
| Repeated dose reductions beginning with 1st cycle | 1 | 2 |
| Only first cycle | 1 | 2 |
| Reasons for dose reductions starting with first cycle (referring to therapy lines before paclitaxel, n=46) | ||
| Hematotoxicity | 28 | 61 |
| Reduced general condition | 5 | 11 |
| Cardiac comorbidities | 4 | 9 |
| Bad tolerance of previous chemotherapy | 3 | 7 |
| Polyneuropathy | 2 | 4 |
| Concomitant radiotherapy | 2 | 4 |
| Unknown | 2 | 4 |
Toxicities during paclitaxel therapy
| Toxicities | All grades, n [%] | CTC grade 3/4, n [%] |
|---|---|---|
| Any toxicity | 108 [58] | 28 [15] |
| Fatigue | 46 [25] | 9 [5] |
| Polyneuropathy | 32 [17] | 3 [1.5] |
| Arthralgia/myalgia | 28 [15] | 3 [1.5] |
| Any hematotoxicity* | 27 [14.5] | 11 [6] |
| Leukocytopenia | 12 [6.5] | 7 [4] |
| Anemia | 11 [6] | 1 [0.5] |
| Thrombocytopenia | 5 [3] | 2 [1] |
| Pancytopenia | 2 [1] | 1 [0.5] |
| Nausea/vomiting | 25 [13.5] | 6 [3] |
| Hepatotoxicity | 7 [4] | 2 [1] |
| Allergic reaction | 6 [3] | 1 [0.5] |
*, multiple entries for one patient possible.
Toxicities during paclitaxel therapy in ECOG PS 2 vs. ECOG PS 0–1 patients
| Toxicities§ | All grades, n [%] | CTC grade 3/4, n [%] | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ECOG PS 2 | ECOG PS 0–1 | P value+ | ECOG PS 2 | ECOG PS 0–1 | P value+ | ||
| Any toxicity | 22 [63] | 86 [62] | 0.91 | 5 [14] | 23 [16.5] | 0.74 | |
| Fatigue | 11 [31] | 35 [25] | 0.56 | 3 [9] | 6 [4] | 0.31 | |
| Polyneuropathy | 6 [17] | 26 [13] | 0.83 | 0 | 3 [2] | 0.38 | |
| Arthralgia/Myalgia | 6 [17] | 22 [11] | 0.85 | 0 | 3 [2] | 0.38 | |
| Any hematotoxicity | 5 [14] | 22 [11] | 0.82 | 1 [3] | 9 [6] | 0.41 | |
| Leukocytopenia | 3 [9] | 9 [6] | 0.66 | 1 [3] | 6 [4] | 0.67 | |
| Anemia | 1 [3] | 10 [7] | 0.35 | 0 | 1 [0.7] | 0.61 | |
| Thrombocytopenia | 1 [3] | 4 [3] | 0.99 | 0 | 2 [1] | 0.48 | |
| Pancytopenia | 0 | 2 [1] | 0.48 | 0 | 1 [0.7] | 0.61 | |
| Nausea/vomiting | 4 [11] | 21 [15] | 0.56 | 2 [6] | 4 [3] | 0.41 | |
| Hepatotoxicity | 1 [3] | 6 [4] | 0.67 | 0 | 2 [1] | 0.48 | |
| Allergic reaction | 2 [6] | 4 [3] | 0.41 | 0 | 1 [0.7] | 0.61 | |
§, data available for n=35 ECOG PS 2 patients and n=139 ECOG PS 0–1 patients; +, comparison of toxicity rates between ECOG PS 2 patients and ECOG PS 0–1 patients with Chi-Square.
Efficacy of paclitaxel therapy
| Best response, n [%] | 2nd line (n=12) | 3rd line (n=61) | 4th line (n=89) | 5th and 6th line (n=23) | Overall (n=185) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DCR | 6 [50] | 15 [25] | 24 [27] | 7 [31] | 52 [28] |
| PR | 3 [25] | 9 [15] | 14 [16] | 5 [22] | 31 [17] |
| SD | 3 [25] | 6 [10] | 10 [11] | 2 [9] | 21 [11] |
| PD | 0 | 24 [39] | 38 [43] | 10 [43] | 72 [39] |
| Discordant | 0 | 4 [7] | 4 [4] | 0 | 8 [4] |
| Unknown (no restaging performed)* | 6 [50] | 18 [29] | 23 [26] | 6 [26] | 53 [29] |
*, due to rapid clinical deterioration.
Response according to dose of paclitaxel therapy
| Response depending on dose reduction | n | % |
|---|---|---|
| No dose reduction | 134 | 100 |
| PR | 25 | 19 |
| SD | 18 | 13 |
| PD | 55 | 41 |
| Discordant | 4 | 3 |
| Unknown | 32 | 24 |
| With dose reduction | 51 | 100 |
| PR | 6 | 12 |
| SD | 3 | 6 |
| PD | 19 | 37 |
| Discordant | 4 | 8 |
| Unknown | 19 | 37 |
Efficacy of paclitaxel therapy in patients with ECOG PS 2
| Best response in patients with ECOG PS 2, n [%] | 2nd line (n=3) | 3rd line (n=16) | 4th line (n=13) | 5th line (n=6) | Overall (n=38) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DCR | 2 [67] | 4 [25] | 3 [23] | 2 [33] | 11 [29] |
| PR | 1 [33] | 2 [12.5] | 2 [15] | 1 [17] | 6 [16] |
| SD | 1 [33] | 2 [12.5] | 1 [8] | 1 [17] | 5 [13] |
| PD | 0 | 1 [6] | 3 [23] | 0 | 4 [10.5] |
| Discordant | 0 | 1 [6] | 1 [8] | 0 | 2 [5] |
| Unknown (no restaging performed)* | 1 [33] | 10 [63.5] | 6 [46] | 4 [67] | 21 [55] |
*, due to rapid clinical deterioration.
Figure 2Progression-free survival (PFS) of paclitaxel-treated patients. (A) Kaplan Meier PFS analysis of all paclitaxel-treated SCLC patients (n=185, median PFS =1.6 months); (B) stratification according to administered paclitaxel dose: median PFS =1.9 vs. 1.6 vs. 1.4 months for full dose vs. dose reduction <25% vs. dose reduction ≥25%; log rank-test for trend P=0.013).
Results of multivariate Cox regression analysis
| Variable | N* | HR (Exp(B))** | 95%CI*** | Significance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PFS | ||||
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 110 | |||
| Female | 58 | 0.653 | 0.5–0.9 | 0.018 |
| Dose reduction | ||||
| No dose reduction | 120 | |||
| <25% | 21 | 1.160 | 07–1.9 | 0.552 |
| ≥25% | 27 | 2.550 | 1.6–4.1 | <0.001 |
| Age | 165 | 0.968 | 0.95–0.99 | 0.002 |
| Localization of metastatic sites | ||||
| Non-hepatic/non-cerebral | 44 | |||
| Hepatic or cerebral | 93 | 1.120 | 0.7–1.7 | 0.575 |
| Hepatic and cerebral | 31 | 1.652 | 1.0–2.7 | 0.045 |
| OS | ||||
| ECOG performance-status | ||||
| ECOG 0–1 | 117 | |||
| ECOG 2 | 35 | 1.751 | 1.1–2.7 | 0.012 |
| Number of metastatic sites | ||||
| One metastatic site | 48 | |||
| ≥2 metastatic sites | 104 | 0.947 | 0.6–1.4 | 0.802 |
| Localization of metastatic sites | ||||
| Non-hepatic/non-cerebral | 41 | |||
| Hepatic or cerebral | 85 | 1.886 | 1.2–2.9 | 0.004 |
| Hepatic and cerebral | 26 | 2.712 | 1.5–5.0 | 0.001 |
| Dose reduction | ||||
| No dose reduction | 109 | |||
| <25% | 18 | 0.733 | 0.4–1.3 | 0.313 |
| ≥25% | 25 | 1.762 | 1.1–2.9 | 0.024 |
| Tumor response | ||||
| No staging possible | 47 | |||
| PD/discordant | 64 | 0.154 | 0.1–0.3 | <0.001 |
| Disease control | 41 | 0.069 | 0.04–0.1 | <0.001 |
| Pack years | 150 | 1.751 | 1.00–1.02 | 0.012 |
*, patients included in this analysis; **, hazard ratio; ***, 95% confidence-interval.
Figure 3Overall survival (OS) of paclitaxel-treated patients. (A) Kaplan Meier OS analysis of all paclitaxel-treated patients in this study (n=185, median OS =3.3 months); (B) stratification according to ECOG performance status (3.8 vs. 2.5 months for ECOG PS 0-1 vs. ECOG PS 2; P=0.002; (C) stratification according to number of metastatic sites (5.7 vs. 4.4 vs. 3.1 months for no metastatic sites vs. metastases in 1 organ system vs. metastases in >1 organ system; P=0.038); (D) presence of cerebral and/or hepatic metastases [4.7 vs. 3.3 vs. 3.3 vs. 2.1 months for non-cerebral/non-hepatic vs. hepatic (P=0.008) vs. cerebral (P=0.047) vs. both (P<0.001)]; (E) stratification according to administered paclitaxel dose (3.9 vs. 2.5 months for full dose vs. dose reduction ≥25%; P=0.004); and (F) stratification according to timing of paclitaxel therapy (3.1 vs. 3.4 vs. 3.3 vs. 3.8 months for 2nd-line vs. 3rd-line vs. 4th-line vs. 5th-line and 6th-line; P=0.86).