1. Potential treatment options after first-line chemotherapy for advanced NSCLC: maintenance treatment or early second-line?
- Author
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Fortunato Ciardiello, Clorinda Schettino, Cesare Gridelli, Paolo Maione, Marianna Luciana Ferrara, Antonio Rossi, Maria Anna Bareschino, Paola Claudia Sacco, Gridelli, C, Maione, P, Rossi, A, Ferrara, Ml, Bareschino, Ma, Schettino, C, Sacco, Pc, and Ciardiello, Fortunato
- Subjects
Oncology ,Drug ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,Lung Neoplasms ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Treatment options ,Surgery ,Regimen ,Second line ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Overall survival ,Humans ,Non small cell ,First line chemotherapy ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Although substantial progress has been made in the therapeutic options currently available for patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the overall survival profile remains poor for most patients. One of the strategies currently under investigation with the aim of prolonging survival in NSCLC patients is maintenance treatment with either a chemotherapeutic agent or a molecularly targeted agent after first-line chemotherapy. Moreover, this can consist of drugs included in the induction regimen or other noncrossresistant agents. With the currently available data, maintenance treatment with a different noncrossresistant agent (i.e., an early second-line treatment) is perhaps the most promising strategy. The drug chosen for the early second-line treatment should be a well-tolerated agent, considering that patients have just completed a particularly toxic platinum-based chemotherapy. Extending treatment with targeted agents rather than chemotherapy can provide longer progression-free and overall survival times without increasing toxicity. However, at the moment, only progression-free survival has been shown to be consistently superior with maintenance approaches; the evaluation of survival benefits is warranted before defining this strategy as a possible treatment option. Further studies are warranted to establish the role of maintenance chemotherapy in patients with advanced NSCLC.
- Published
- 2009