Τετάρτη 5 Αυγούστου 2009

AVASTIN WITH INF APPROVED BY FDA FOR RENAL CANCER

August 4, 2009 — The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a new indication for bevacizumab intravenous infusion (Avastin, Genentech, Inc) for the treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma. The recommended dose is 10 mg/kg every 2 weeks in combination with interferon α-2a (9 MIU subcutaneously 3 times weekly).

Bevacizumab is a monoclonal antibody that works by binding to vascular endothelial growth factor and preventing its role in angiogenesis, which deprives tumors of blood, oxygen, and other nutrients necessary to support their growth and metastasis.

"We hope that researchers someday find a cure for kidney cancer," said William P. Bro, chief executive officer of the Kidney Cancer Association in a company news release. "Until then, each new medicine...offers patients an opportunity to find a treatment best suited for them."

Approval of the indication was based on data from a global, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 study — the Avastin in Renal (AVOREN) study — of 649 patients with newly diagnosed metastatic renal cell carcinoma, showing that the addition of bevacizumab to interferon α-2a significantly increased progression-free survival by 67% compared with interferon α-2a alone (10.2 months vs 5.4 months; hazard ratio [HR], 0.60; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.49 – 0.72).

Results also showed that the combination therapy significantly decreased tumor size by 30% compared with 12% for interferon α-2a alone. However, no improvements were observed in median overall survival on the final analysis after 444 deaths (survival, 23 months vs 21 months; HR, 0.86; 95% CI, 0.72 – 1.04).

Adverse events reported in the study were consistent with the safety profiles for bevacizumab and interferon α-2a, with fatigue (13%), weakness (10%), proteinuria (7%), hypertension (6%), and bleeding (3%) most often reported.

Bevacizumab previously was approved for the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer, nonsquamous non-small cell lung cancer, metastatic breast cancer, and glioblastoma.

Τρίτη 4 Αυγούστου 2009

GM-CSF IS BACK?

Cancer. 2009 Jul 27. [Epub ahead of print]Related Articles, LinkOut
Click here to read
Comparison of hospitalization risk and associated costs among patients receiving sargramostim, filgrastim, and pegfilgrastim for chemotherapy-Induced neutropenia.

Heaney ML, Toy EL, Vekeman F, Laliberté F, Dority BL, Perlman D, Barghout V, Duh MS.

Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York.

BACKGROUND:: Sargramostim is a granulocyte-macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Unlike filgrastim and pegfilgrastim, which are granulocyte-colony-stimulating factors (G-CSFs), sargramostim activates a broader range of myeloid lineage-derived cells. Therefore, GM-CSF might reduce infection risk more than the G-CSFs. This study compared real-world infection-related hospitalization rates and costs in patients using G/GM-CSF for chemotherapy-induced neutropenia. METHODS:: This retrospective matched-cohort study analyzed nationally representative health insurance claims in the United States from 2000 through 2007. The sample population included patients who received chemotherapy and G/GM-CSF. G/GM-CSF treatment episodes began with the first administration of G/GM-CSF and ended when a subsequent administration was >28 days after a prior administration. Sargramostim patients were matched 1:1 with filgrastim and pegfilgrastim patients based on gender and birth year. Outcomes included infection-related hospitalization rates and the associated costs. Hospitalization rates were analyzed using univariate and multivariate Poisson methods; covariates included myelosuppressive agents received, tumor type, anemia, and comorbidities. RESULTS:: A total of 990 sargramostim-filgrastim and 982 sargramostim-pegfilgrastim matched pairs were analyzed. Cohorts were similar with regard to age, gender, and comorbid conditions. Several differences were observed with regard to tumor type, anemia, and chemotherapy, but no systematic trends were apparent. Sargramostim patients experienced a 56% lower risk of infection-related hospitalizations compared with filgrastim and pegfilgrastim patients. Infection-related hospitalization costs were 84% and 62% lower for sargramostim patients compared with patients treated with filgrastim and pegfilgrastim, respectively. CONCLUSIONS:: Among patients with or at risk for chemotherapy-induced neutropenia, these data indicated that use of sargramostim was associated with a reduced risk of infection-related hospitalization and lower associated costs compared with filgrastim or pegfilgrastim. Cancer 2009. (c) 2009 American Cancer Society.

PCI FOR NSCLC?

August 4, 2009 (San Francisco, California) — When researchers began the RTOG 0214 study in 2001, their intent was to show conclusively whether prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) improves survival in patients with advanced nonsmall-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Although the scientists never met their accrual goal — the trial randomized just 340 patients to PCI or observation — the results might still have a decided impact on oncology practice, according to researchers here at the 13th World Conference on Lung Cancer, organized by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer.

The trial's initial results — announced at this year's American Society of Clinical Oncology meeting — showed no significant difference in overall survival rate between patients randomized to PCI and those randomized to observation. However, patients in the observation group were twice as likely to develop brain metastases after 1 year (18% vs 7.7%; P = .004). At the meeting, the researchers announced results related to the secondary end points of their study, including disease-free survival, neurocognitive function, and quality of life.

Patients in the study had stage IIIA or IIIB lung cancer without disease progression after loco-regional treatment with surgery and/or radiation therapy with or without chemotherapy. PCI was delivered at a total once-daily dose of 30 Gy at 2 Gy/fraction.

Although there was no difference in disease-free survival between the PCI and observation groups at 1 year, there was a trend toward improved disease-free survival in PCI patients, although it did not reach statistical significance (56.4% vs 51.2%). The researchers also found no difference in quality of life between the 2 groups after using several measures, and there was no difference in the patients' Mini-Mental Status Examination scores. However, when the researchers tested patients with the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, they found that there was a significantly greater deterioration in immediate recall (P = .03) and delayed recall (P = .008) in PCI patients after 1 year.

There was also no clear difference in quality of life between the PCI and observation groups when age was taken into account or when patients with and without brain metastases were compared. "This prospective study does show the benefits of PCI, and the data should be considered when doctors discuss this treatment with their patients," said lead researcher Alexander Sun, MD, radiation oncologist at Princess Margaret Hospital at the University of Toronto in Ontario. Dr. Sun noted that longer follow-up is needed on RTOG 0214 patients to truly assess the risks and benefits of PCI. More follow-up data on patients' neurocognitive function will be presented at this year's American Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology meeting, he said.

"This study gives us quite an encouraging picture for the future," said Françoise Mornex, MD, PhD, from the Centre Hospitalier Lyon Sud in France, moderator of the session at which the clinical trial was presented. "With this kind of sequential approach, the toxicity is reasonable and the dose is safe."

"With advanced NCSLC patients, there is always the danger of [central nervous system] failure. When you compare PCI to no PCI for these patients, you just see better results," she added. However, Dr. Mornex noted that memory loss and neurological changes can be attributed to PCI and should be kept in mind when planning treatment. "You have to remember in this study that the benefit of PCI was very real, and it could change practice in the future," she said.

Dr. Sun and Dr. Mornex have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

13th World Conference on Lung Cancer (WCLC): Abstract C6.6. Presented August 2, 2009.

ADDITION OF MTP-PE FOR METASTATIC OSTEOSARCOMA

Related Articles, Links
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Addition of muramyl tripeptide to chemotherapy for patients with newly diagnosed metastatic osteosarcoma: a report from the Children's Oncology Group.

Chou AJ, Kleinerman ES, Krailo MD, Chen Z, Betcher DL, Healey JH, Conrad EU 3rd, Nieder ML, Weiner MA, Wells RJ, Womer RB, Meyers PA; on behalf of the Children's Oncology Group.

Department of Pediatrics, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York.

BACKGROUND:: The addition of liposomal muramyl tripeptide phosphatidylethanolamine (MTP-PE) to chemotherapy has been shown to improve overall survival in patients with nonmetastatic osteosarcoma (OS). The authors report the results of addition of liposomal MTP-PE to chemotherapy for patients with metastatic OS. METHODS:: Intergroup-0133 was a prospective randomized phase 3 trial for the treatment of newly diagnosed patients with OS. The authors compared 3-drug chemotherapy with cisplatin, doxorubicin, and high-dose methotrexate (Regimen A) to the same 3 drugs with the addition of ifosfamide (Regimen B). The addition of liposomal MTP-PE to chemotherapy was evaluated. RESULTS:: Five-year event-free survival (EFS) for patients who received liposomal MTP-PE (n = 46) was 42% versus 26% for those who did not (n = 45) (relative risk for liposomal MTP-PE, 0.72; P = .23; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.42-1.2). The 5-year overall survival for patients who received MTP-PE versus no MTP-PE was 53% and 40%, respectively (relative risk for liposomal MTP-PE, 0.72; P = 0.27; 95% CI, 0.40-1.3). The comparison of Regimen A with Regimen B did not suggest a difference for EFS (35% vs 34%, respectively; relative risk for Regimen B, 1.07; P = .79; 95% CI, 0.62-1.8) or overall survival (52% vs 43%, respectively; relative risk for Regimen B, 1.1, P = .75; 95% CI, 0.61-2.0). CONCLUSIONS:: When the metastatic cohort was considered in isolation, the addition of liposomal MTP-PE to chemotherapy did not achieve a statistically significant improvement in outcome. However, the pattern of outcome is similar to the pattern in nonmetastatic patients. Cancer 2009. (c) 2009 American Cancer Society.

NEW STAGING SYSTEM FOR LUNG CANCER

Changes in the proposed seventh edition of TNM classification of lung tumors
Primary tumor (T):
T1 lesions are divided based upon size into T1a ([less than or equal to]2 cm) and T1b (>2 cm but [less than or equal to]3 cm)
T2 lesions are divided into T2a (>3 cm but [less than or equal to]5 cm) and T2b (>5 cm but [less than or equal to]7 cm)
T2 tumors >7 cm are reclassified as T3
T4 tumors with satellite nodules in the same lobe as the primary tumor are reclassified as T3
Additional nodules in a different lobe of same lung are reclassified as T4 rather than M1
Malignant pleural or pericardial effusions or pleural nodules are now classified as metastasis (M1a) rather than T4
Regional nodes (N):
No changes
Metastasis (M):
Subdivided into M1a (malignant pleural or pericardial effusion, pleural nodules, nodules in contralateral lung) and M1b (distant metastasis)
Stage grouping:
T2aN1M0 lesions are classified as IIA, rather than IIB
T2bN0M0 lesions are classified as IIA, rather than IB
T3 (>7 cm), N0M0 lesions are classified as IIB, rather than IB
T3 (>7 cm), N1M0 lesions are classified as IIIA, rather than IIB
T3N0M0 (nodules in same lobe) lesions are classified as IIB, rather than IIIB
T3N1M0 or T3N2M0 (nodules in same lobe) are classified as IIIA, rather than IIIB
T4M0 (ipsilateral lung nodules) lesions are classified as IIIA (if N0 or N1) and IIIB (if N2 or N3), rather than stage IV
T4M0 (direct extension) lesions are classified as IIIA (if N0 or N1), rather than IIIB
Malignant pleural effusions (M1a) are classified as IV, rather than IIIB


Proposed 7th edition TNM staging system for lung cancer


Primary tumor (T)
T1 - Tumor [less than or equal to]3 cm diameter, surrounded by lung or visceral pleura, without invasion more proximal than lobar bronchus
T1a - Tumor [less than or equal to]2 cm in diameter
T1b - Tumor >2 cm but [less than or equal to]3 cm in diameter
T2 - Tumor >3 cm but [less than or equal to]7 cm, or tumor with any of the following features:
Involves main bronchus, [greater than or equal to]2 cm distal to carina
Invades visceral pleura
Associated with atelectasis or obstructive pneumonitis that extends to the hilar region but does not involve the entire lung
T2a - Tumor >3 cm but [less than or equal to]5 cm
T2b - Tumor >5 cm but [less than or equal to]7 cm
T3 - Tumor >7 cm or any of the following:
Directly invades any of the following: chest wall, diaphragm, phrenic nerve, mediastinal pleura, parietal pericardium, main bronchus <2>
Atelectasis or obstructive pneumonitis of the entire lung
Separate tumor nodules in the same lobe
T4 - Tumor of any size that invades the mediastinum, heart, great vessels, trachea, recurrent laryngeal nerve, esophagus, vertebral body, carina, or with separate tumor nodules in a different ipsilateral lobe
Regional lymph nodes (N)
N0 - No regional lymph node metastases
N1 - Metastasis in ipsilateral peribronchial and/or ipsilateral hilar lymph nodes and intrapulmonary nodes, including involvement by direct extension
N2 - Metastasis in ipsilateral mediastinal and/or subcarinal lymph node(s)
N3 - Metastasis in contralateral mediastinal, contralateral hilar, ipsilateral or contralateral scalene, or supraclavicular lymph node(s).
Distant metastasis (M)
M0 - No distant metastasis
M1 - Distant metastasis
M1a - Separate tumor nodule(s) in a contralateral lobe; tumor with pleural nodules or malignant pleural or pericardial effusion
M1b - Distant metastasis
Stage groupings
Stage IA: T1a-T1b N0 M0
Stage IB: T2a N0 M0
Stage IIA: T1a-T2a N1 M0
T2b N0 M0
Stage IIB: T2b N1 M0
T3 N0 M0
Stage IIIA: T1a-T3 N2 M0
T3 N1 M0
T4 N0-N1 M0
Stage IIIB: T4 N2 M0
T1a-T4 N3 M0
Stage IV: Any T Any N M1a or M1b

NEW STAGING SYSTEM FOR UTERINE SARCOMAS

Staging for uterine sarcomas (leiomyosarcomas, endometrial stromal sarcomas, adenosarcomas, and carcinosarcomas)
Stage Definition
(1) Leiomyosarcomas
I Tumor limited to uterus
IA <5>
IB >5 cm
II Tumor extends to the pelvis
IIA Adnexal involvement
IIB Tumor extends to extrauterine pelvic tissue
III Tumor invades abdominal tissues (not just protruding into the abdomen)
IIIA One site
IIIB > one site
IIIC Metastasis to pelvic and/or para-aortic lymph nodes
IV
IVA Tumor invades bladder and/or rectum
IVB Distant metastasis
(2) Endometrial stromal sarcomas (ESS) and adenosarcomas*
I Tumor limited to uterus
IA Tumor limited to endometrium/endocervix with no myometrial invasion
IB Less than or equal to half myometrial invasion
IC More than half myometrial invasion
II Tumor extends to the pelvis
IIA Adnexal involvement
IIB Tumor extends to extrauterine pelvic tissue
III Tumor invades abdominal tissues (not just protruding into the abdomen)
IIIA One site
IIIB > one site
IIIC Metastasis to pelvic and/or para-aortic lymph nodes
IV
IVA Tumor invades bladder and/or rectum
IVB Distant metastasis
(3) Carcinosarcomas
Carcinosarcomas should be staged as carcinomas of the endometrium

SURGERY AFTERCHEMOTHERAPY AND RADIOTHERAPY FOR STAGE III NSCLC

Compared with patients who underwent treatment with chemotherapy plus radiotherapy (without surgery), there was no improvement in overall survival. However, an exploratory analysis of the data showed that surgery could improve overall survival, but only if a lobectomy was performed.

These results give "clear arguments in favor of surgery in well-selected subsets of patients," note Wilfried Eberhardt, MD, and colleagues from University Hospital Essen in Germany, in an accompanying editorial.

Expert thoracic centers have been routinely adding surgery to the management of selected patients with stage III disease after induction chemotherapy and chemoradiotherapy for a number of years, despite a lack of supporting evidence from randomized trials, the editorialists write.

Dr. Eberhardt and colleagues ask if surgery should now be performed in patients with stage IIIA(N2) NSCLC after induction chemoradiotherapy. They answer yes, but add that it should be a less extensive resection (e.g., lobectomy) than a pneumonectomy.

Benefit Seen Only in Subgroup of Patients

The study, led by Kathy Albain, MD, professor of medicine at Loyola University Chicago in Maywood, Illinois, found a benefit from surgery only in a subgroup of patients.

There was no overall survival benefit for patients who received surgery in addition to chemotherapy and radiation, compared with those who did not (23.6 months vs 22.2 months, hazard ratio [HR], 0.87; P = .24).

However, patients in the surgical group did experience improved median progression-free survival, compared with the nonsurgical group (12.8 months vs 10.5 months; HR, 0.77). At 5 years, 32 of the 202 patients (22%) in the surgical group remained free of disease, as did 13 of 194 patients (11%) in the nonsurgical group.

At 5 years, the researchers noted an absolute survival difference of 7% in favor of the surgical group; 37 of the patients (27%) remained alive, compared with 24 (20%) in the nonsurgical group, but this did not achieve statistical significance.

One reason for the absence of benefit with surgery, they surmised, might be related to the high death rate after pneumonectomy, which was primarily attributable to acute respiratory distress syndrome and other respiratory-related causes. An overall-survival matching analysis was feasible for 90 of 98 lobectomies and 51 of 54 pneumonectomies. The median overall survival with lobectomy was 33.6 months and without surgery was 21.7 months. At 5 years, 21 of 90 patients (36%) who had undergone lobectomy were alive, compared with 10 of 90 patients (18%) who had not.

Conversely, survival rates were nonsignificantly worse for pneumonectomy patients than for nonsurgical patients (18.9 months vs 29.4 months). At 5 years, overall survival rates were 22% with pneumonectomy and 24% without surgery.

It is unlikely that a prospective trial is going to be conducted to validate whether surgical approaches are better than nonsurgical approaches if lobectomies can be done, the authors note.

"Thus, medically healthy patients with stage IIIA(N2) nonsmall-cell lung cancer should be assessed by a team skilled in multimodality treatment, and treatment options can be considered during assessment," they write. "On the basis of the findings of our study, patients should be counseled about the risks and potential benefits of definitive chemotherapy plus radiotherapy with and without a surgical resection (preferably by lobectomy)."

Mixed Results From Previous Trials

Previous trials have produced mixed results. The results of several phase 2 pilot studies that were conducted to evaluate the role of surgical resection after induction treatment with chemotherapy alone or with concurrent chemotherapy plus radiotherapy proved controversial (J Clin Oncol. 2005;23:3257-3269; Lung Cancer. 2003;42;S9-S14; Pass HI et al. Lung cancer: principles and practice, 3rd ed. JB Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, 2005:626-649). Long-term survival rates were higher than anticipated, but substantial toxicity, postoperative morbidity, and mortality were observed, write the authors of the current study. These findings were also criticized because the patients had heterogeneous substages of disease and appeared to be unusually healthy, compared with the general population with stage III NSCLC.

As previously reported by Medscape Oncology, the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) conducted a phase 3 trial in which patients with stage IIIA(N2) NSCLC were randomized to surgery or radiotherapy after response to induction chemotherapy. The results showed little difference in survival between the 2 strategies.

In the multicenter phase 3 study by Dr. Albain and colleagues, patients with stage T1-3pN2M0 NSCLC received concurrent induction chemotherapy consisting of 2 cycles of cisplatin 50 mg/m2 on days 1, 8, 29, and 36, and etoposide 50 mg/m2 on days 1–5 and 29–33, plus radiotherapy (45 Gy). If there was no disease progression, patients were randomized to surgical resection or continued radiotherapy to a maximum dose of 61 Gy, followed by additional chemotherapy.

The editorialists emphasize that "further data from randomized trials are urgently needed to define the best selection criteria for bimodal or trimodal treatment."

The study was funded by National Cancer Institute, the Canadian Cancer Society, and the National Cancer Institute of Canada. The authors and the editorialists have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

Lancet. Published online before print July 24, 2009. Abstract

A NOVEL WAY OF LEUKEMIA RELAPSING AFTER STEM CELL TRANPLANTATION

July 30, 2009 — Italian researchers have described a series of patients with acute myeloid leukemia in whom the leukemic cells underwent some "genetic trickery" in order to escape immune surveillance, resulting in a relapse of the disease.

The finding is reported by Luca Vago MD, PhD, from Hospital San Raffaele–Telethon Institute for Gene Therapy in Milan, Italy, and colleagues in the July 30 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

They describe a series of patients with acute myeloid leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome who were treated with a stem-cell transplant and an infusion of T cells from a donor who was a haploidentical family member. In these cases, only 1 of the donor's 2 human leukocyte antigen (HLA) haplotypes matched a haplotype of the recipient; the remaining haplotype was not a match.

This treatment approach — a haploidentical stem-cell transplant — is potentially curative in patients with high-risk hematologic cancers who do not have an HLA-matched donor, the researchers explain.

However, in their series of 43 patients treated this way, 17 went on to relapse.

Among these 17 relapsed patients, the researchers identified 5 patients (27%) in whom the leukemic cells had undergone a transformation after the transplant. What happened in these 5 cases is that the patient's leukemic cells underwent a mutation, during which they lost the patient-specific HLA haplotype that was a mismatch for the donor HLA haplotype, and replaced it with one that did match.

This switch made for a complete HLA match between the patient's leukemic cells and the donor's cells, thereby eliminating a major immunologic target on the leukemic cells, note John Barrett, MD, from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute in Bethesda, Maryland, and Bruce Blazar, MD, from the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, in an accompanying editorial.

"The result of this genetic trickery was a failure of immune surveillance, a plausible reason for the recurrence of the leukemia," add the editorialists.

Implications for Treatment After Relapse

"Loss of the patient-specific HLA haplotype is easy to diagnose, and has important implications for selecting a treatment that is suitable for relapse after transplantation," the researchers write.

They report that among the 5 cases they identified, 2 were candidates for a subsequent transplantation of haploidentical hematopoietic stem cells from a different donor, who was mismatched for the HLA haplotype retained in the leukemic cells. "Remarkably, 1 of the 2 patients is alive and in complete remission more than 16 months after the second transplantation," they note.

Uniparental Disomy

The editorialists explain that the mutation that occurred is known as uniparental disomy. The cancer cell has lost an HLA haplotype that was inherited from one of the patient's parents and replaced it with a haplotype from the other parent. The loss occurs during mitotic recombination, leaving the daughter cell with the 2 HLA haplotypes derived from only 1 parent — hence the "uniparental" description. The chromosome number remains unchanged, and for this reason standard cytogenetic techniques fail to detect the swap, they add.

This finding has implications for the treatment of myeloid leukemia and perhaps other cancers that recur after hemopoietic stem-cell transplantation, the editorialists write. For example, donor lymphocyte infusions would most likely be ineffective, even if high numbers of lymphocytes were given, in cases of uniparental disomy of malignant cells that recur after transplantation.

This is the most important practical implication from this finding, corresponding author Fabio Ciceri, MD, director of the Hematology and Bone Marrow Transplant Unit at the San Raffaele Scientific Institute in Milan, told Medscape Oncology.

The usual treatment of relapsed leukemia after allograft is donor lymphocyte infusion, Dr. Ciceri explained. However, in view of this new finding, such a maneuver should be postponed until there is clear documentation of the absence of loss of heterozygosity, he emphasized. In cases of documented loss of heterozygosity, a second allograft from a donor mismatched for the HLA expressed by leukemia is more appropriate, he added. This was the approach his team took for the 2 patients described above who underwent a second transplantation.

Dr. Ciceri added that the frequency of this event is high, and "we suspect that it is even higher than actually detected."

Coauthor Chiara Bonini, MD, from the Cancer Immunotherapy and Gene Therapy Program at San Raffaele Scientific Institute in Milan, Italy, reports receiving consulting fees from MolMed. The remaining coauthors and the editorialists have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

N Engl J Med. 2009;361:478-488 and 524-525.

PAP TEST PREVENTS ALSO CERVICAL ADENOCARCINOMA

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) Jul 23 - Contrary to common opinion, routine cervical screening can identify early-stage adenocarcinoma and adenosquamous carcinoma of the cervix, according to a large case-control study that used routine records of cervical cytology from UK databases.

"Although there can be no doubt about its effectiveness in preventing squamous cell carcinoma, there is little evidence of any benefit on adenocarcinoma and adenosquamous carcinoma of the cervix, and many authors have concluded that it is ineffective," Dr. Peter Sasieni and co-investigators point out in the International Journal of Cancer for August 1.

They evaluated screening histories for 3305 women, ages 20 to 69 years, with invasive cervical cancer diagnosed since 1990. The cancers included adenocarcinomas (19%), adenosquamous carcinomas (4%), and squamous carcinomas (77%).

For each subject, Dr. Sasieni, at the Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine in London, and co-researchers chose an age-matched control from the same group practice, and another from a different practice in the same area. They used these data to estimate the magnitude and duration of the low-risk period following a negative smear, and the degree of protection associated with routine screening.

The odds ratio of developing a stage 1B tumor or worse within 2.5 years of an invasive cervical cancer was 0.23 for adenocarcinoma, 0.09 for squamous carcinoma, and 0.10 for adenosquamous carcinoma. The differences between 2.5 and 3.5 years after a negative smear were even larger, with odds ratios of 0.67 for adenocarcinoma, 0.15 for squamous carcinoma, and 0.20 for adenosquamous tumors.

"It is no surprise that screening is less protective against adenocarcinoma of the cervix," Dr. Sasieni's team points out. "These can occur in the endocervical canal and are less amenable to detection at an early stage by exfoliation cytology."

Still, the researchers maintain that screening has a significant impact on the incidence of adenocarcinoma. They estimate that such tumors can be detected, but it may be harder to do so, and requires a shorter lead time than for squamous cell carcinoma.

By contrast, the impact of screening on adenosquamous carcinoma was nearly the same as the impact on squamous carcinoma. The authors theorize that this similarity between the two types "represents phenotypic drift of lesions that evolve from CIN and only later acquire glandular involvement."

Int J Cancer 2009;125:525-529.

H1N1 VACCINATION GUIDELINESS

July 30, 2009 (Atlanta, Georgia) — New H1N1 influenza vaccine recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) suggest priority distribution among 5 groups.

The CDC announced the recommendations in a press conference held after an "urgent" meeting of the Advisory Committee of Immunization Practices yesterday.

Recommended Target Groups

Anne Schuchat, MD, director of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases with the CDC, announced that the Advisory Committee of Immunization Practices recommends that 5 target groups receive the vaccine:

  • Pregnant women,
  • household contacts of children who are younger than 6 months of age,
  • healthcare workers and emergency medical services personnel,
  • children and young people between the ages of 6 months and 24 years of age, and
  • nonelderly adults with underlying risk conditions or medical conditions that increase their risk for complications from influenza.

The committee also addressed the issue of what to do in the event of a vaccine shortage and how to prioritize those groups who should receive the vaccine.

"In general, under most circumstances, we really ought to promote vaccine in all of these 5 focus groups, and...picking them or prioritizing some before others would not benefit the public," Dr. Schuchat said. The CDC's estimate of the target groups totals 159 million individuals, but "there's a lot of overlap in some of the groups...[it is] probably a lower number than that," she said.

"Just in Case" Prioritization Group

However, the Advisory Committee of Immunization Practices also proposed a priority group consisting of a much smaller group, about 41 million individuals, that should be vaccinated in the event of a shortage. These include

  • Pregnant women,
  • household contacts of children who are younger than 6 months of age,
  • healthcare workers and emergency services personnel who have direct patient contact or direct contact with infectious substances,
  • children between the ages of 6 months and 4 years of age, and
  • children 5 to18 years of age who have underlying risk factors that put them at greater risk for complications of influenza.

According to Dr. Schuchat, the real operating assumption is that they will "go forward with the broader group," she said.

Seasonal Influenza Vaccine Remains Important

According to the CDC, the seasonal influenza vaccine remains very important. "Our assumption is that it is very likely [that seasonal influenza and H1N1 vaccines] can be given together," Dr. Schuchat told Medscape Infectious Diseases during the briefing. "There will be more data coming out...but it is likely they can be given at the same visit," she said. According to Dr. Schuchat, 2 doses of the vaccine will probably be needed, with 15 μg antigen/dose.

"The recommendations make sense on the basis of what we know about this virus," said John Bartlett, MD, chief of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Baltimore, Maryland.

"Of interest is the observation that persons over 64 years, a high priority for seasonal flu vaccine, are not included here," he told Medscape Infectious Diseases. "That decision is based on the curious observation that the people born before 1957 appear to be relatively well protected from infection or serious disease with this strain of H1N1 virus." According to Dr. Bartlett, it appears that a similar strain circulated before 1957, accounting for this protection; other comparable viruses also have circulated more recently.

"Pregnant women and young people seem to be especially susceptible to [the H1N1] influenza strain and also to bad outcomes when infected," he said. "But the elderly should get [the] seasonal flu vaccine, since they account for the vast majority of the 36,000 deaths attributed to seasonal influenza in the average season" he added. "In fact, most people should get seasonal flu vaccine. The current indications for that vaccine apply to about 80% of the US population."

Production a Concern

Dr. Schuchat noted that the production of the H1N1 vaccine could be unpredictable. "Right now, we are to on track, expecting vaccine doses in the fall," she said, adding that "exactly how many [doses will be available] exactly when will be tough to pinpoint."

"Production is a concern, since the novel H1N1 virus does not grow well in eggs, and 2 doses are likely to be necessary," said Dr. Bartlett. If the virus thrives in the fall in the Northern hemisphere, "it will be a challenge to be ready," he said.

NEW DATA FOR ERLOTINIB MAINTENANCE-THE BEST STATISTICAL ANALYSIS ENGINE OF THE WORLD

August 1, 2009 (San Francisco, California) — New results from the phase 3 SATURN trial show that erlotinib (Tarceva) maintenance therapy significantly improves overall survival in nonsmall-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients. These results, a secondary end point of the trial, were presented here at the 13th World Conference on Lung Cancer (WCLC), organized by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer.

Details about the improvement in progression-free survival, the primary end point of this trial, were also released. The initial progression-free-survival results were presented earlier this year at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) meeting, as reported by Medscape Oncology at the time.

The SATURN trial involved 889 patients who had not progressed after 4 cycles of platinum-based chemotherapy. Maintenance therapy with erlotinib (150 mg/day) resulted in an increase in progression-free survival time, from 41% to 45%, compared with placebo (hazard ratio [HR], 0.71; P = .000003), researchers announced at the meeting.

Overall survival statistics, a secondary end point of the study, showed that those receiving erlotinib had a significantly longer survival than those receiving placebo (12 months vs 11 months). "When we looked at survival according to [epidermal growth-factor receptor] EGFR status, we found that survival was not driven by this status. There was also a statistically significant benefit for patients with EGFR wild-type tumor," said lead researcher Federico Cappuzzo, MD, professor and vice director of the Instituto Clinico Humanitas in Milan, Italy.

These longer-term (3 year) progression-free-survival results are in contrast with those announced at ASCO, where researchers noted a "huge benefit" for patients with the EGFR mutation compared with other patients in the trial.

Although patients with EGFR mutations fared better than others in terms of progression-free survival, a benefit was also seen for those with other molecular markers, Dr. Cappuzzo told the meeting. For instance, patients with EGFR wild-type tumors receiving erlotinib had a median survival of 11.3 months, compared with 10.2 months for those receiving placebo.

"There was a significant progression-free survival benefit regardless of any tumor marker," said Wolfram Brugger, MD, PhD, coauthor and head of the Department of Hematology, Oncology and Immunology at Schwarzwald-Baar Clinic in Villingen Schenningen, Germany. Although KRAS mutations are a strong negative prognostic factor, they did not have any predictive value for erlotinib therapy in this study, he said.

Survival Benefit Seen Early in Study

Although the survival benefit of 1 month seen in the erlotinib group might not seem like much, Dr. Cappuzzo noted that there was a 10% absolute difference in survival between the treatment and placebo groups at 3 years. During a press conference, he said that the patients who fared best in the study had survived up to 30 months.

"When you look at these studies, you have to consider individual patients," noted David Gandara MD, WCLC program chair. "Some individual patients may have struck out and others may have hit a home run. For any of these therapies where we see an improved survival or response rate, it's important to find out who these treatments benefit most. That way, we can give treatments to those who will really benefit, [and not expose] others to unnecessary drug toxicity and financial toxicity."

Dr. Gandara added that as the SATURN studies mature, scientists are likely to gain information about what kind of survival benefit erlotinib can provide.

In the SATURN trial, the difference in survival between those receiving erlotinib and those receiving placebo was seen early in the study, Dr. Cappuzzo noted. However, the difference in survival became especially pronounced after 9 months.

Although patients who received erlotinib experienced more adverse events, such as rash and diarrhea, their quality of life was not negatively affected by the drug. "There were no unexpected toxicities," said Dr. Cappuzzo. Using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Lung (FACT-L) instrument, the researchers found that those receiving erlotinib experienced little difference in quality of life, compared with those receiving placebo. However, when time to pain and time to analgesic use were considered, those receiving erlotinib benefited more than those receiving placebo.

No "Sea Change" in Practice As Yet

The survival benefit seen with erlotinib in the SATURN trial was announced in a press release from the manufacturer, OSI Pharmaceuticals, 2 weeks ago, and there is an expectation that the data will secure an indication for the drug as maintenance therapy in NSCLC. "But will that matter? It's already [US Food and Drug Administration]-approved as a second-line therapy, so this is effectively moving it a few weeks or months earlier [to becoming] a more proactive second-line treatment, in my mind. It is already approved for use as second-line therapy," said H. Jack West, MD, medical director of thoracic oncology at the Swedish Cancer Institute in Seattle, Washington, writing in his July 19, 2009 Blowing Smoke blog for Medscape Oncology.

Benefit with other maintenance therapy in NSCLC was reported at ASCO — notably, an improvement in overall survival with pemetrexed and an improvement in progression-free-survival with the combination of erlotinib and bevacizumab (the ATLAS trial).

But Dr. West notes that, from his "conversations with various medical oncologists, ranging from broad community-based practice to thoracic oncology specialists, there isn't a sea change happening in the wake of these positive trials."

"Many oncologists seem far more inclined to extend 1 or more agents from first line [therapy] until progression than to switch to a new treatment after 4 lines of therapy," he writes.

"The one setting in which I do think there may be a prioritization of earlier introduction of erlotinib is in patients who happen to have [undergone] EGFR-mutation testing during the first 4 cycles of chemotherapy [with or without bevacizumab] and are found to be positive. These patients had a very, very substantial progression-free-survival benefit (HR, 0.10 on SATURN) compared with placebo," Dr. West writes. "I also think that an oral therapy may be a more appealing maintenance approach for a certain subset of patients who prefer to take a break from IV therapy but not to take a break from treatment."

"It is fair to say, though, that none of the maintenance trials did an ideal job of really isolating the timing of treatment, since all of them ended up treating [less than] two thirds of the patients in the placebo or delayed-treatment arm," Dr. West continued. "In that sense, these trials may really do a better job of just highlighting [the fact] that patients who showed stable disease or a response to first-line chemotherapy are exactly the patients most likely to benefit from later treatment, and that the key difference is that when you give maintenance therapy, nobody misses their opportunity for further benefit."

Dr. Cappuzzo has received honoraria from AstraZeneca, Boehringer, Eli Lilly, and Roche. Dr. Brugger and Dr. Gandara have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

13th World Conference on Lung Cancer (WCLC): Abstract A2.1. Presented August 1, 2009.

BOUSOULEGAS SPEAKING

August 1, 2009 — After a steady decline, women have increasingly been opting to undergo mastectomy to treat early-stage breast cancer at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, according to an analysis of surgeries conducted there.

Although the reasons for this increase remain unclear, researchers speculate that it might be related to the use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) prior to surgery. Women who had a breast MRI were more likely to have a mastectomy than those who did not (54% vs 36%).

The findings, published online July 27 in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, were presented at the American Society of Clinical Oncology 2008 Annual Meeting, and were reported by Medscape Oncology at that time.

Mastectomy rates at the Mayo Clinic declined from 1997 to 2003, but in 2004, there was a reversal of this trend. The rate of mastectomies rose from 31% to 43% between 2003 and 2006, which was equivalent to rates seen in 1997.

In a 1990 consensus statement, the National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Panel supported breast-conservation surgery as the preferred method of primary surgical therapy for women with early-stage breast cancer. The percentage of those opting to undergo breast-conservation therapy (lumpectomy followed by radiation) increased after the release of this statement, from 35% in 1989 to 60% in 1995 for stage I disease and from 19% in 1989 to 29% in 1995 for stage II disease. But data regarding the rates of mastectomy during the past 10 years are limited, the authors note.

What Has Changed?

"The obvious question is: What has changed?" according to an accompanying editorial. In addition to the current study, other studies have shown rising rates of mastectomy during the same period.

In their commentary, Monica Morrow, MD, from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, and Jay R. Harris, MD, from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, point out that an increased awareness of and testing for BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations are frequently cited as factors that have increased the use of mastectomy.

However, these mutations occur in only 5% to 10% of all breast cancer patients, they write. Although the proportion of women with a first-degree relative with breast cancer did not increase over time, the rate of mastectomy did. Therefore, it is an unlikely explanation for a large part of the effect seen in this series and in other studies.

Breast MRI is being increasingly used at the time of diagnosis to exclude the presence of multifocal or multicentric breast cancer in the ipsilateral breast, explain the editorialists, who point to a recent meta-analysis in which MRI identified additional tumor foci in 16% of newly diagnosed breast cancer patients. This led to a change in treatment for 8% to 33% of patients, and most commonly resulted in mastectomy that would otherwise not have been performed (J Clin Oncol. 2008;26:3248-3258).

In the current study, lead author Matthew P. Goetz, MD, medical oncologist at the Mayo Clinic, and colleagues attempted to evaluate the role of MRI in the increased rate of mastectomy. In their retrospective analysis, they identified 5405 patients who underwent breast surgery at the Mayo Clinic between 1997 and 2006.

The results showed that mastectomy rates varied significantly according to year of surgery. Mastectomy rates gradually, decreased from 45% in 1997 to 31% in 2003 (P < .0001), but then rose from 37% in 2004 to 43% in 2006. Concurrently, the use of MRI increased, from 10% in 2003 to 23% in 2006 (P < .0001).

"The key finding of this study is that patients who underwent MRI were more likely to undergo mastectomy than those who did not undergo MRI," the editorialists note. "In a multivariable model, both MRI and year of surgery were independent predictors of mastectomy."

Even though women who underwent MRI were more likely to have a mastectomy, the largest increase in the mastectomy rate occurred in women who did not have a breast MRI. Although mastectomy rates increased from 2003 to 2006 in patients who had and had not undergone an MRI, the study authors write, this increase was not statistically significant in women who had undergone an MRI. But the increase was significant among those who had not undergone an MRI (29% in 2003 vs 41% in 2006).

Better Communication Needed

The editorialists note that although these findings about the use of MRI and increased mastectomy rates are "troubling," they represent only 1 piece of the puzzle, since increasing rates of mastectomy were also observed in patients who did not undergo MRI. "In many parts of the United States, patients are pushing their surgeons for mastectomy, even bilateral mastectomy, despite being told that such treatment will not improve prognosis," they write. They also point out that this trend toward mastectomy does not seem to be occurring in Europe.

An increasing body of evidence suggests that the biology of the cancer rather than a specific type of local therapy largely determines the risk for local recurrence. "Clearly, we are not communicating this to our patients if they continue to choose mastectomy in the belief that it is a reasonable choice for decreasing risk of cancer recurrence," write the editorialists. "More work is also clearly needed on how to effectively communicate complex treatment choices to women facing the stress of a new cancer diagnosis."

The study authors and editorialists agree that new studies are needed to evaluate whether these changes in surgical management lead to improvements in quality of life and/or patient satisfaction.

The authors and editorialists have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

J Clin Oncol. Published online before print July 27, 2009. Abstract