Meta-analysis of chemotherapy in nasopharynx carcinoma (MAC-NPC): An update on 26 trials and 7080 patients.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_22AE66170C77
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Meta-analysis of chemotherapy in nasopharynx carcinoma (MAC-NPC): An update on 26 trials and 7080 patients.
Journal
Clinical and translational radiation oncology
Working group(s)
MAC-NPC collaborative Group
Contributor(s)
Aupérin A., Blanchard P., Benhamou E., Bourhis J., Carmel A., Chakrabandhu S., Tc Chan A., Chen L., Chen M.Y., Chen Q.Y., Chen Y., Chappell R.J., Choi H., Tt Chua D., Lee Kiang Chua M., Fountzilas G., Higgins J., Hong M.H., Hong R.L., Huang P.Y., Pun Hui E., Hsiao C.F., Kam M., Angeliki Koliou G., Lw Kwong D., Lacas B., Lai S.C., On Lam K., LeBlanc M.L., Wm Lee A., Fun Victor Lee H., Fei Li W., Ma B., Ma J., Mai H.Q., Mo F., Moon J., Tong Ng W., Ngan R., Ollivier C., O'Sullivan B., Petit C., Pierre Pignon J., Poh S.X., Rücker G., Sham J., Lim Soong Y., Sun Y., Tan T., Tang L.Q., Tung Y., Wee J., Wu X., Xu T., Zhang L., Zhang Y., Zhu G.
ISSN
2405-6308 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2405-6308
Publication state
Published
Issued date
01/2022
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
32
Pages
59-68
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
Chemotherapy, when added to radiotherapy, improves survival in locally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). This article presents the second update of the Meta-Analysis of Chemotherapy in NPC.
Published or unpublished randomized trials assessing radiotherapy (±a second chemotherapy timing) with/without chemotherapy in non-metastatic NPC patients were identified. Updated data were sought for studies included in the previous rounds of the meta-analysis. The primary endpoint was overall survival. All trials were analyzed following the intent-to-treat principle using a fixed-effects model. Treatments were classified in five subsets according to chemotherapy timing. The statistical analysis plan was pre-specified.
Eighteen new trials were identified. Individual patient data were available for seven. In total, the meta-analysis now included 26 trials and 7,080 patients. The addition of chemotherapy reduced the risk of death, with a hazard ratio (HR) of 0.79 (95% confidence interval (CI) [0.73; 0.85]), and an absolute survival increase at 5 and 10 years of 6.1% [+3.9; +8.3] and + 8.4% [+5.7; +11.1], respectively. The largest effect was observed for concomitant + adjuvant, induction (with concomitant in both arms) and concomitant chemotherapy, with respective HR [95%CI] of 0.68 [0.59; 0.79] (absolute survival increase at 5 years: 12.3% (7.0%;17.6%)), 0.73 [0.63; 0.86] (6.0% (2.5%;9.5%)) and 0.81 [0.70; 0.92] (5.2% (0.8%;9.6%)). The benefit of chemotherapy was also demonstrated by improvement in progression-free survival, cancer mortality, locoregional control and distant control. There was a significant interaction between patient age and chemotherapy effect.
This updated meta-analysis confirms the benefit of concomitant chemotherapy and concomitant + adjuvant chemotherapy, and suggests that addition of induction or adjuvant chemotherapy to concomitant chemotherapy improves tumor control and survival. The benefit of chemotherapy decreases with increasing patient age.
Published or unpublished randomized trials assessing radiotherapy (±a second chemotherapy timing) with/without chemotherapy in non-metastatic NPC patients were identified. Updated data were sought for studies included in the previous rounds of the meta-analysis. The primary endpoint was overall survival. All trials were analyzed following the intent-to-treat principle using a fixed-effects model. Treatments were classified in five subsets according to chemotherapy timing. The statistical analysis plan was pre-specified.
Eighteen new trials were identified. Individual patient data were available for seven. In total, the meta-analysis now included 26 trials and 7,080 patients. The addition of chemotherapy reduced the risk of death, with a hazard ratio (HR) of 0.79 (95% confidence interval (CI) [0.73; 0.85]), and an absolute survival increase at 5 and 10 years of 6.1% [+3.9; +8.3] and + 8.4% [+5.7; +11.1], respectively. The largest effect was observed for concomitant + adjuvant, induction (with concomitant in both arms) and concomitant chemotherapy, with respective HR [95%CI] of 0.68 [0.59; 0.79] (absolute survival increase at 5 years: 12.3% (7.0%;17.6%)), 0.73 [0.63; 0.86] (6.0% (2.5%;9.5%)) and 0.81 [0.70; 0.92] (5.2% (0.8%;9.6%)). The benefit of chemotherapy was also demonstrated by improvement in progression-free survival, cancer mortality, locoregional control and distant control. There was a significant interaction between patient age and chemotherapy effect.
This updated meta-analysis confirms the benefit of concomitant chemotherapy and concomitant + adjuvant chemotherapy, and suggests that addition of induction or adjuvant chemotherapy to concomitant chemotherapy improves tumor control and survival. The benefit of chemotherapy decreases with increasing patient age.
Keywords
Chemotherapy, Individual patient data, Meta-analysis, Nasopharynx carcinoma, Randomized trials
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
04/01/2022 15:27
Last modification date
27/08/2024 6:22