Skoči na glavni sadržaj

Not enough evidence to give a second round of chemotherapy to patients with lung cancer in a poor state

Patients with lung cancer and a good physical condition who have not been cured by a first round of chemotherapy often receive a second round of chemotherapy (second-line). A second round of chemotherapy may not increase the survival chances of these patients and may make them feel worse because of bad side effects. This review has found only one study that compared the effects of a second round of chemotherapy with treatment showing no benefits for the patients, apart from keeping them comfortable. This study does not provide enough evidence to judge whether such treatment causes more benefits than harms and further larger studies are needed before firm conclusions can be drawn.

Uvod

The role of second-line chemotherapy for the treatment of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who have relapsed or failed to respond to first-line treatment was unclear.

Ciljevi

To determine the effectiveness of any second-line chemotherapy in patients with NSCLC.

Metode pretraživanja

Medline (1966-July 2001), Embase (1974-July 2001), Cancerlit (1993-July) and tthe Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL, issue 2 2001) were searched. In addition a handsearch was performed and experts in the field contacted to identify any further studies that had not been found by the electronic searches.

Kriteriji odabira

Randomised controlled clinical trials in which any second-line chemotherapy was compared with placebo or best supportive care in patients with NSCLC who had failed to respond to any previous chemotherapy regimen.

Prikupljanje podataka i obrada

Data were extracted by 2 independent authors and revised by a third author.

Glavni rezultati

Only one study was included. This study included a total of 204 patients who were randomised to receive either doxetaxel or best supportive care. Following an unacceptably high toxic death rate the dose of doxetaxel was reduced from 100 mg/m² to 75 mg/m². Docetaxel gave an extra 2.4 months survival - an average of 7.0 months vs 4.6 months on best supportive care. At 1 year after diagnosis 29% of doxetaxel treated patients were alive compared with 19% of the best supportive care group.

Zaključak autora

Definitive recommendations cannot be made since evidence is only available from one randomised controlled trial which, though of reasonable quality had a number of limitations. There is currently no evidence to support second-line treatment of patients with poor performance status. Larger, well-designed controlled trials are needed to further evaluate whether the benefits of second-line chemotherapy to patients with non-small cell lung cancer outweigh its risks and costs.

Citat
Bonfill Cosp X, Serra C, Sacristan M, Nogué M, Losa F, Montesinos J. Second-line chemotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2002, Issue 2. Art. No.: CD002804. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD002804.

Naše korištenje kolačića

Koristimo nužne kolačiće kako bi naša web stranica radila. Željeli bismo postaviti i neobavezne analitičke kolačiće koji će nam pomoći da ju poboljšamo. Nećemo postaviti neobavezne kolačiće ako ih ne omogućite. Korištenjem ovog alata postavit će se kolačić na vaš uređaj, kako bi zapamtili vaše postavke. Svoje postavke kolačića možete promijeniti u bilo kojem trenutku klikom na vezu "Postavke kolačića" u podnožju svake stranice.
Za detaljnije informacije o kolačićima koje koristimo pogledajte našu stranicu Kolačići.

Prihvati sve
Postaviti