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Addition of atezolizumab to standard care does not improve limited-stage small cell lung cancer survival

by Medical Xpress
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The addition of the cancer immunotherapy drug atezolizumab to the standard of care concurrent chemoradiation (cCRT) did not improve overall survival for patients with limited-stage small cell lung cancer (LS-SCLC) in the second planned interim analysis of the NRG Oncology/Alliance NRG-LU005 clinical trial. These results were recently reported during the Plenary Session of the American Society for Radiation Oncology Annual Meeting in Washington, DC.

“While given concurrently with chemoradiation did not improve survival, we have still learned quite a bit from these findings. With the success of the ADRIATIC trial presented at ASCO earlier this year, it is clear that LS-SCLC patients benefit from immunotherapy, but it should be given after completion of chemoradiation and not concurrently. Our results also suggest that twice daily radiation may have performed better and could be considered the preferred radiation regimen for these patients,” stated Kristin A. Higgins, MD, Professor of Radiation Oncology at City of Hope National Medical Center and Chief Clinical Officer, City of Hope Atlanta, and the lead author of the NRG-LU005 abstract.

NRG-LU005 is an open-label, randomized, phase III, international clinical study that enrolled 554 eligible patients with LS-SCLC in the U.S. and Japan. Patients received one cycle of chemotherapy prior to registration in the trial. Following registration, patients were stratified by choice of cisplatin or carboplatin chemotherapy, their fractionation schedule, sex, and ECOG performance status, and then were randomly assigned to receive either cCRT alone or cCRT with atezolizumab at 1,200 mg every three weeks for a maximum of 17 cycles. The primary aim of NRG-LU005 was to compare overall survival with and without atezolizumab.

At the second planned interim analysis at a median follow up of 21 months for all patients, the 1, 2, and 3 year overall were 82.6% (95% CI 77.2—86.9), 62.9% (95% CI 56.2—69.0) and 50.3% (95% CI 42.3—57.8) for control, and 80.2% (95% CI 74.7—84.6), 58.6% (95% CI 52.1- 64.6) and 44.7% (95% CI 36.6—52.4) for adding atezolizumab, respectively. The for cCRT alone was 39.5 months (95% CI 27.5—not reached) and 33.1 months for the atezolizumab arm (HR= 1.11, 95% CI: 0.85-1.45). No new or unexpected safety findings were noted.

In addition to the primary objectives, NRG-LU005 also included secondary objectives comparing the following rates between treatments: , distant metastasis-free survival, cumulative incidence of local failure, complete or partial response, and adverse events.

More information:
Higgins KA, Hu C, Ross HJ, Jabbour SK, Kozono DE, Owonikoko TK, Kaira K, Gupta AK, Mohindra P, Dib EG, Brownstein J, Chun S, Kuzma CS, Kotecha RR, Onitilo AA, Chen Y, Stinchcombe TE, Wang XF, Paulus R, Bradley JD. (2024, September-October). Concurrent Chemoradiation +/- Atezolizumab in limited-stage small cell lung cancer (LS-SCLC): Results of NRG Oncology/Alliance LU005. Paper presented during the Plenary Session at the annual meeting of the American Society for Radiation Oncology. Washington, DC.

Provided by
NRG Oncology

Citation:
Clinical trial: Addition of atezolizumab to standard care does not improve limited-stage small cell lung cancer survival (2024, September 30)
retrieved 30 September 2024
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