1. Phase II study of neoadjuvant chemotherapy and radiation therapy with thoracotomy in the treatment of clinically staged IIIA non-small cell lung cancer
- Author
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Deutsch, Margaret, Crawford, Jeffrey, Leopold, Kenneth, Wolfe, Walter, Foster, William, Herndon, James, Blackwell, Susan, and Yost, Rebecca
- Subjects
Lung cancer, Non-small cell -- Care and treatment ,Carboplatin -- Dosage and administration ,Radiotherapy -- Usage ,Thoracotomy -- Health aspects ,Combined modality therapy -- Evaluation ,Health - Abstract
Background. The purpose of this study was to assess the ability of administering to patients induction chemotherapy with carboplatin and etoposide (VP-16), followed by full-course radiation therapy and weekly carboplatin with tolerable toxicity as preoperative therapy to downstage disease thus allowing the resection of clinically staged IIIA non-small cell lung cancer. Methods. Twenty-eight eligible patients with good performance status and previously untreated, marginally resectable stage IIIA non-small cell lung cancer received induction chemotherapy with carboplatin (dosed per the Egorin formulation), and VP-16 (100 mg/[m.sup.2]) followed by 6000 cGy of chest radiotherapy over six weeks administered concurrently with weekly doses of 100 mg/[m.sup.2] of carboplatin. Patients who had either responsive or stable disease underwent thoracotomy, with attempted surgical resection of the primary lung lesion and the areas of abnormal adenopathy. Procedures involving less than a pneumonectomy were used whenever feasible. Results. Fifty-two cycles of induction chemotherapy were administered. The average initial dose of carboplatin was 407 mg/[m.sup.2]. Toxicity was tolerable with grade 3-4 neutropenia and/or thrombocytopenia in 48 and 27% of the patients. There were no septic deaths. Full-dose radiotherapy was administered to 82% of patients, with 73% receiving at least five weekly doses of carboplatin. The radiographically assessed response rate to the neoadjuvant treatment was 64% (partial response, 46%; minimal response, 18%). Sixteen patients underwent gross tumor resection with 12 (43%) having negative pathologic margins. Six patients had pneumonectomy. There were three perioperative deaths (19%); two were secondary to respiratory failure after the patients underwent a pneumonectomy. The median survival for all 28 patients was 15 months, and for the 16 patients undergoing thoracotomy was 23 months. Eight patients were alive and in remission, with follow-up ranging from 8 to 31 months. Conclusions. The authors conclude that (1) carboplatin and VP-16, followed by full-dose radiotherapy with weekly carboplatin administration, is a well tolerated and effective regimen in the treatment of patients with marginally resectable stage IIIA non-small cell lung cancer; and (2) full-course radiotherapy can be administered before surgical resection without additional surgical morbidity or mortality. Cancer 1994; 74:1243-52. Key words: lung cancer, neoadjuvant treatment, radiation therapy, carboplatin chemotherapy.
- Published
- 1994