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SWOG S0221: A Phase III Trial Comparing Chemotherapy Schedules in High-Risk Early-Stage Breast Cancer

Authors :
Muhammad Salim
Helen K. Chew
Kristine Rinn
Jonathan K. Cho
Robert B. Livingston
William E. Barlow
Halle C. F. Moore
James A. Stewart
George Thomas Budd
Julie Gralow
Claudine Isaacs
Lawrence E. Flaherty
Gordan Srkalovic
Timothy David Moore
Bradley Alexander McGregor
Gary V. Burton
Gabriel N. Hortobagyi
Danika L. Lew
Kathy S. Albain
Timothy J. Hobday
Source :
Journal of Clinical Oncology. 33:58-64
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2015.

Abstract

Purpose To determine the optimal dose and schedule of anthracycline and taxane administration as adjuvant therapy for early-stage breast cancer. Patients and Methods A 2 × 2 factorial design was used to test two hypotheses: (1) that a novel continuous schedule of doxorubicin-cyclophosphamide was superior to six cycles of doxorubicin-cyclophosphamide once every 2 weeks and (2) that paclitaxel once per week was superior to six cycles of paclitaxel once every 2 weeks in patients with node-positive or high-risk node-negative early-stage breast cancer. With 3,250 patients, a disease-free survival (DFS) hazard ratio of 0.82 for each randomization could be detected with 90% power with two-sided α = .05. Overall survival (OS) was a secondary outcome. Results Interim analyses crossed the futility boundaries for demonstrating superiority of both once-per-week regimens and once-every-2-weeks regimens. After a median follow-up of 6 years, a significant interaction developed between the two randomization factors (DFS P = .024; OS P = .010) in the 2,716 patients randomly assigned in the original design, which precluded interpretation of the two factors separately. Comparing all four arms showed a significant difference in OS (P = .040) but not in DFS (P = .11), with all treatments given once every 2 weeks associated with the highest OS. This difference in OS seemed confined to patients with hormone receptor–negative/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) –negative tumors (P = .067), with no differences seen with hormone receptor–positive/HER2-negative (P = .90) or HER2-positive tumors (P = .40). Conclusion Patients achieved a similar DFS with any of these regimens. Subset analysis suggests the hypothesis that once-every-2-weeks dosing may be best for patients with hormone receptor–negative/HER2-negative tumors.

Details

ISSN :
15277755 and 0732183X
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....763056d07433b86316effd2cfcfba686
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2014.56.3296