The role of paclitaxel in the first-line treatment of patients with ‘poor prognosis’ germ cell tumor (GCT) undergoing sequential high dose chemotherapy

2004 ◽  
Vol 22 (14_suppl) ◽  
pp. 4633-4633
Author(s):  
J. T. Hartmann ◽  
O. Rick ◽  
M. Thomas ◽  
J. Schleicher ◽  
B. Metzner ◽  
...  
2003 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ugo De Giorgi ◽  
Giorgio Papiani ◽  
Giuseppe Severini ◽  
Giammaria Fiorentini ◽  
Maurizio Marangolo ◽  
...  

Background Approximately 80% of patients with advanced germ cell tumors (GCTs) can be cured with cisplatin-based chemotherapy. Patients with poor-prognosis disease have a cure rate of only 50%, whereas patients with first relapse have only a 25% chance of prolonged survival and potential cure following standard therapy. High-dose chemotherapy (HDC) is being investigated in patients with GCTs to improve the results of salvage treatment and in first-line setting for poor prognosis disease. Methods The authors review the results of the clinical trials that have evaluated the role of HDC in GCT patients. Data were obtained using a computer-assisted MEDLINE search, and meeting abstracts with clinical relevance in this field were hand-searched. Open randomized phase III studies are described and examined. Results Several phase II studies have shown a possible benefit for patients with recurrent disease, but the preliminary results of a phase III randomized trial did not demonstrate a survival advantage for HDC after three courses of standard-dose chemotherapy in the salvage therapy of patients in whom first-line treatment has failed. Three prospective, randomized trials are evaluating the role of HDC in a first-line setting. Conclusions New HDC strategies are emerging, involving new drugs (eg, paclitaxel), intensive induction regimens, and upfront and/or multiple courses of HDC. The evaluation of mature data of randomized trials will better define the role of HDC in this disease.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 920-920 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Greb ◽  
Daniel H. Schiefer ◽  
Julia Bohlius ◽  
Guido Schwarzer ◽  
Andreas Engert

Abstract Background: High-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell support (HDT) has been proven effective in relapsed aggressive Non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). However, conflicting results of HDT as part of first-line treatment have been reported in randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Here, we report our updated meta-analysis to better define the role of HDT in these patients. Methods: RCTs were identified by computerized search and handsearching of conference proceedings. Data extraction and quality assessment was performed independently by two reviewers. First authors were contacted to request individual patient data. Eight investigators provided us with individual patient data, for five trials data were extracted from survival curves. The hazard ratio (HR) was used as a measure of treatment effect; the inverse variance method (fixed effect model) was used for pooling. The relative risk was determined for binary data. Results: 15 RCTs including 3079 patients were eligible for this meta-analysis. Overall treatment-related mortality was 6.0% in the HDT group and not significantly different compared to conventional chemotherapy (RR 1.33, p=0.59). Analysis of 13 studies including 2018 patients showed significantly higher CR rates in the group receiving HDT (RR 1.10, p=0.004). However, HDT did not have an effect on OS, when compared to conventional chemotherapy. The pooled HR was 1.04 (p=0.58). There was no statistical heterogeneity among the trials and sensitivity analyses underscored the robustness of these results. Subgroup analysis of prognostic groups according to IPI did not show any survival difference between HDT and controls in 12 trials (low and low-intermediate risk IPI: HR 1.41, high-intermediate and high risk IPI: HR 0.97). Event-free survival (EFS) also showed no significant difference between HDT and CT (HR 0.93, p=0.31). We incorporated several additional variables to possibly identify other risk factors such as the proportions of diffuse large cell lymphoma, protocol adherence, the HDT strategy used, response status of patients before HDT, the conditioning regimen used, and methodological issues. However, our analyses demonstrate that the results described here are not related on either of these factors. Conclusion: Despite higher CR rates, there is no benefit for HDT in patients with aggressive NHL when incorporated in first-line treatment.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document