Abstract 1381P
Background
EGFR and ALK-negative non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is treated by a platinum doublet chemotherapy in combination with paclitaxel, gemcitabine, pemetrexed or vinorelbine. Cisplatin can be nephrotoxic in standard doses in elderly patients.
Methods
A phase II randomized clinical trial where we have recruited 120 patients with NSCLC randomly assigned into two groups in 1:1 model. 88 patients presented with stage IIIB disease while the remaining 32 patients with stage IV disease. Patients aged between 60-85 years (67 years in median). Group I included 60 patients who received cisplatin at a dose of 75mg/m2 and oral vinorelbine 80mg/m2 on weeks 1, 2 of a 21-day cycle in patients with adenocarcinoma and gemcitabine 1g/m2 on days 1, 8 in patients with squamous cell carcinoma. Group II included 60 who patients received cisplatin at a fixed dose of 50mg repeated every 14 days in a 28-day cycle plus vinorelbine in adenocarcinoma patients and gemcitabine in squamous cell carcinoma patients with the same schedule as group I. Patients received 3 cycles each in both groups and were evaluated with CT scan; responders continued the same protocol until progression or toxicity.
Results
There was no complete responder in both groups. In group I, 33 patients demonstrated objective response 55% (95% CI: 47.4-61.2) versus 32 patients in group II 53.3% (95% CI: 46.6-58.3) (HR is 0.99, 95% CI:0.96-1.12) p value (0.05). CDDP at a fixed dose of 50mg is comparable to standard dose in term of response rate. Toxicity profile included nephrotoxicity which was documented more frequently in group I (20% versus 2% in group II (p value 0.004). hematologic toxicity such as neutropenia and anemia were more frequent in group I as well. In multivariate analysis, factor associated with better response was non-respiratory symptomatic patients at diagnosis, odds ratio 1.23 (95% CI:1.12-1.35). in univariate analysis, decreased platelet count during therapy was correlated with poor response in both groups, odds ratio 1.22 (95% CI: 1.08-1.33).
Conclusions
Cisplatin at low dose is more safe and comparable to the standard dose in term of objective response in patients with NSCLC treated with chemo-based platinum doublet with good toxicity profile.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The author.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
The author has declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1383P - Distribution of actionable genetic variants in different sample types of Chinese NSCLC: A large real-world data based study
Presenter: Dongmei Lin
Session: Poster session 06
1384P - Efficacy of cemiplimab as monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy in Japanese patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (aNSCLC)
Presenter: Yuki Sato
Session: Poster session 06
1385P - Uncovering resistance mechanisms and vulnerabilities of KEAP1 mutated lung adenocarcinoma
Presenter: Mariana Mancini
Session: Poster session 06
1386P - Prognostic value of EGFR A859S alteration in advanced NSCLC patients treated with third-generation EGFR-TKI
Presenter: Wei Xin Zhao
Session: Poster session 06
1387P - Real-world data, tolerability and clinical outcomes in patients with advanced NSCLC treated with sotorasib in the UK
Presenter: Rubab Batool
Session: Poster session 06
1388P - Molecular testing in patients with advanced NSCLC from 2016-23 (Prospective German Registry CRISP, AIO-TRK-0315)
Presenter: Frank Griesinger
Session: Poster session 06
Resources:
Abstract
1389P - Safety and effectiveness of immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy in patients with lung cancer and pre-existing autoimmune disease
Presenter: Siddhartha Goutam
Session: Poster session 06
1390P - Clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes of patients with thoracic SMARCA4-deficient tumour
Presenter: Inès Duparc
Session: Poster session 06