For Lung Cancer Awareness Month #LCAM I’m going to summarize 30 important lung cancer trials over 30 days. These posts are directed at non-medical professionals, with descriptions of the results and of what makes a good trial. #lcsm 1/11
Today we are back to looking at a study of chemotherapy for metastatic non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Our last study in this area (3 November) established the notion that all platinum doublets were more or less the same. Today’s study, from 2008, overturned that consensus.
This was a trial comparing cisplatin-gemcitabine (standard) with cisplatin-pemetrexed. Pemetrexed is administered in a more convenient schedule than gemcitabine, and likely causes fewer side effects. Because of these advantages, the study was designed for noninferiority. 3/11
This means that the investigators thought they did not have to prove that survival with cis-pem was better, just that it was not substantially worse. This is called a non-inferiority design. Recall our discussion of confidence intervals yesterday. 4/11
The investigators chose a non-inferiority margin of 15%. This choice is arbitrary. The trial is positive if the upper limit of the confidence interval for risk of death with Cis-pem is not 15% worse than the risk with cis-gem. 5/11
This was a large trial, randomizing 1725 patients. As you can see from the KM curve below, there is no obvious difference between the two arms. Formally, the non-inferiority criterion was met. 6/11
A subgroup analysis was then performed. NSCLC can be divided into subtypes on the basis of the appearance of the cancer cells. Some are squamous carcinoma, others non-squamous (mainly adenocarcinoma). Survival was better with cis-pem in the non-squamous subgroup, but not squamous
This finding has been incredibly influential. Platinum-pemetrexed remains the standard doublet for non-squamous NSCLC to this day. The impact on the sales of pemetrexed has resulted in this being called “The Billion Dollar Subgroup Analysis”. 8/11
Some concerns about this result:
1. The authors performed at least 8 subgroup analyses. Because each has a 5% probability of being positive by chance, the likelihood of a spurious finding is high 2. There was no corresponding PFS advantage with pem, which is hard to explain 9/11
There is no reason to suspect that cis-pem is any worse than other doublets, but the evidence that it is superior to other doublets in non-squamous NSCLC is perhaps not as strong as we’d like to think. We probably put more faith in subgroups than we ought. (See Nov 3, 6, 7...)
Tomorrow is Flower Power, with the FLAURA trial and an introduction to statistical power.
Please, take some time today to observe Remembrance Day. As we mull the cataclysms of the 20th Century may we also find the courage and selflessness to face the cataclysms of the 21st. 11/11
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For Lung Cancer Awareness Month #LCAM I’m going to summarize 30 important lung cancer trials over 30 days. These posts are directed at non-medical professionals, with descriptions of the results and of what makes a good trial. #lcsm 1/14
To date we have looked at trials that compared different treatments. Today, we’re going to look at something a little different: a trial of the schedule of supportive medications that are given along with chemotherapy, in this case vitamin B12 and folic acid with pemetrexed. 2/14
We have seen how pemetrexed has become one of the most commonly used chemotherapy drugs in non-squamous NSCLC (11, 13 November). Compared to other chemo drugs we think that it has a relatively good safety profile, but it was not always so. 3/14
November 14: Controversy, hierarchy
For Lung Cancer Awareness Month #LCAM I’m going to summarize 30 important lung cancer trials over 30 days. These posts are directed at non-medical professionals, with descriptions of the results and of what makes a good trial. #lcsm 1/17
This is the most recent study we’ve looked at so far, from 2020. You may recall that adjuvant chemotherapy (after surgery) increases the chances of cure for early stage lung cancer (Nov 2), and also that we have good oral medications for lung cancer with EGFR mutation (Nov 7, 12)
This trial enrolled people who had resected lung cancer with EGFR mutation. They were allowed to have adjuvant chemotherapy. They were then randomized to three years of the EGFR TKI osimertinib, or three years of placebo. 3/17
This year for Lung Cancer Awareness Month #LCAM I’m going to summarize 30 important lung cancer trials over 30 days. These posts are directed at non-medical professionals, with descriptions of the results and of what makes a good trial.#lcsm 1/17
The uptake of immunotherapy in lung cancer has been rapid and widespread. In 2014 it was research only: in 2021 it is used in all types of lung malignancies, in almost all stages of disease. We will discuss at least six immunotherapy studies in the remainder of the month. 2/17
Lymphocytes are white blood cells that should lead an immune response to tumours. In some cases, tumour cells have a protein on the surface called PD-L1 that binds to a protein called PD-1 on lymphocytes, and serves to “turn off” that part of the immune response. 3/17
For Lung Cancer Awareness Month #LCAM I’m going to summarize 30 important lung cancer trials over 30 days. These posts are directed at non-medical professionals, with descriptions of the results and of what makes a good trial. #lcsm 1/15
Today we are back to looking at EGFR-mutated lung cancer, with the FLAURA trial comparing osimertinib to either gefitinib or erlotinib in the first-line setting. Today’s discussion is from two papers, one looking at Progression Free Survival, the other at Overall Survival 2/15
You may recall from the IPASS study (7 November) that gefitinib improved PFS compared to chemo, with fewer side effects.
Erlotinib was another drug similar to gefitinib.
Osimertinib was the next-generation of EGFR drugs, with several potential improvements. 3/15
This year for Lung Cancer Awareness Month #LCAM I’m going to summarize 30 important lung cancer trials over 30 days. These posts are directed at non-medical professionals, with descriptions of the results and of what makes a good trial. #lcsm 1/15
To date in these tweets I have loosely used the term “lung cancer” to refer to non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), by far the commonest type of lung cancer. Today we’ll look at a trial in small cell lung cancer. 2/15
Small cell cancer is characterized by rapid growth and early metastasis. Initially very chemo responsive, it is resistant to treatments at the time of recurrence. If restricted to one side of the chest (limited stage) it can be treated with chemoradiation with a chance of cure.
For Lung Cancer Awareness Month #LCAM I’m going to summarize 30 important lung cancer trials over 30 days. These posts are directed at non-medical professionals, with descriptions of the results and of what makes a good trial.#lcsm 1/15
Today we have another trial in locally advanced lung cancer. By the time of this trial (2006) the established standard treatment was a radiation dose of 60 Gy plus concurrent chemotherapy. This trial looked at higher radiation doses, and at the new drug, cetuximab. 2/15
Patients were randomized twice: to either 60 or 74 Gy, and to either receive cetuximab or not. This created four arms (60 or 74 Gy, each with or without cetuximab). The cetuximab didn’t add anything, and I’m not going to focus on it in our discussion. 3/15