There will be approximately 40,000 new cases of small-cell lung cancer this year. Prior to 1990, there were several agents with single-agent response rates of 30% to nearly 90% in the untreated small-cell lung cancer population
ABSTRACT: There will be approximately 40,000 new cases of small-cell lungcancer this year. Prior to 1990, there were several agents with single-agentresponse rates of 30% to nearly 90% in the untreated small-cell lung cancerpopulation and approximately 10% to 20% in relapsed patients. During the 1990s,several new chemotherapy agents have displayed activity in small-cell lungcancer (paclitaxel [Taxol], gemcitabine [Gemzar], vinorelbine [Navelbine],topotecan [Hycamtin], and irinotecan [Camptosar, CPT-11]). The majority ofstudies with irinotecan have been conducted in Japan. The US experience islimited to a single multi-institution trial that was conducted in patients withpreviously treated small-cell lung cancer. A total of 44 patients were enteredin the study. Patients were stratified by response to prior therapy. Responsesoccurred in 7 of 44 patients for an overall response rate of 14%. The overallmedian survival was 4.8 months. [ONCOLOGY 15(Suppl 1):11-12, 2001]
There will be approximately40,000 new cases of small-celllung cancer this year. Prior to 1990, there were several agents withsingle-agent response rates in the untreated small-cell lung cancer populationof 30% to nearly 90% (see Table 1) and in relapsed patients of approximately 10%to 20%. Despite an initial sensitivity to chemotherapy, only 10% of allsmall-cell lung cancer patients will have significant long-term survival.Clearly, newer chemotherapy agents are needed for this disease.
During the 1990s, several new chemotherapy agents displayedactivity in small-cell lung cancer (paclitaxel [Taxol], gemcitabine [Gemzar],vinorelbine [Navelbine], topotecan [Hycamtin], and irinotecan [Camptosar,CPT-11]). A list of new agents is included in Table2.
In first- and second-line therapy studies in patients withsmall-cell lung cancer, response rates with irinotecan have ranged from 50% tobetween 14% and 47%, respectively. The majority of these studies with irinotecanwere conducted in Japan.
A recent randomized phase III trial (JCOG 9511) by the JapanClinical Oncology Group in 154 patients with extensive-stage small-cell lungcancer compared the combination of irinotecan and cisplatin (Platinol) tostandard etoposide and cisplatin.[1] The overall response rate (89% vs 67%; P =.013), median survival (420 vs 300 days; P = .047), and 1-year survival (60% vs40%) were superior for patients in the irinotecan-containing arm. Confirmatoryphase III trials with the irinotecan/cisplatin combination are being planned inthe United States using both the Japanese regimen (irinotecan at 60 mg/m2 days1, 8, and 15, plus cisplatin at 60 mg/m2 day 1, every 4 weeks) and a regimen inwhich the schedule is modified to irinotecan at 65 mg/m2 days 1 and 8, pluscisplatin at 30 mg/m2 days 1 and 8, every 3 weeks.
The US experience thus far has been limited to a singlemulti-institution trial involving patients with previously treated small-celllung cancer.[2]
A total of 44 patients were entered in this study, with patientstratification determined by response to prior therapy. Sensitive patients (n =17) previously achieved a complete response/partial response, and relapsedgreater than 3 months after completion of initial therapy. All other patients (n= 27) were considered refractory. Treatment consisted of irinotecan at 125 mg/m2(over 90 minutes) weekly for 4 weeks, followed by a 2-week rest period (onecourse). Treatment continued until disease progression. Patient characteristicswere as follows: median age, 60 years (range: 45 to 78 years); 68% males; andperformance status 60 to 70 (25%), 80 to 100 (75%).
Toxicities
Toxicities included two potentially drug-related deaths (sepsisand a central nervous system event). Hematologic toxicity was mild with 20%grade 3 neutropenia, 7% grade 4 neutropenia, and one episode of neutropenicfever (2.2%). Nonhematologic toxicity was also mild with grade 3/4 late diarrheaoccurring in 26.6% of patients (see Table 3).
Responses
Responses were seen in seven patients (one complete response)for a response rate of 15.9%. Responses occurred in 6/17 sensitive patients(35.3%) and in 1/27 refractory patients (3.7%). Overall time to treatmentfailure was 2.3 months (sensitive, 3.4 months; refractory, 1.3 months), andoverall survival was 4.8 months (sensitive, 5.9 months; refractory, 2.8 months).The results are presented in Table 4.
In conclusion, irinotecan is an active and well-tolerated agentin patients with sensitive relapsed small-cell lung cancer. Studies ofirinotecan combinations in patients with previously untreated small-cell lungcancer are ongoing.
1. Noda K, Nishiwaki Y, Kawahara M, et al: Randomized phase IIIstudy of irinotecan (CPT-11) and cisplatin in extensive-disease small-cell lungcancer: Japan Clinical Oncology Group Study (JCOG9511) (abstract 1887). Proc AmSoc Clin Oncol 19:483a, 2000.
2. De Vore RF, Blanke CD, Denham CA, et al: Phase II study ofirinotecan (CPT-11) in patients with previously treated small-cell lung cancer(SCLC) (abstract 1736). Proc Am Soc Clin Oncol 17:451a, 1998.
Advancing Thoracic Surgery With Robotics and Video-Assisted Strategies
June 13th 2024"Anything that you can do to leverage technology to minimize the variability in surgery eliminates the skill gap so that novice surgeons may become as technically gifted as the intermediate surgeon or the master surgeon."