• 已选条件:
  • × Yan Wang
  • × 期刊论文
  • × 地质学
 全选  【符合条件的数据共:2条】

The oncologist,2020年

Yutao Liu, Yuankai Shi, Xingsheng Hu, Jun Jiang, Lin Yang, Shengyu Zhou, Peng Liu, Junling Li, Yan Wang, Xuezhi Hao

LicenseType:CC BY |

预览  |  原文链接  |  全文  [ 浏览:0 下载:0  ]    

Background Because of rapid disease progression and lack of optimal treatment strategies beyond the second-line, the prognosis of patients with extensive-stage (ES) small cell lung cancer (SCLC) still remains depressing. Alternative treatment strategies are required to improve their prognosis. In this prospective clinical study, we aimed to evaluate the feasibility of single-agent apatinib, a vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 tyrosine kinase inhibitor, as a treatment option for patients with ES-SCLC after failure of at least two prior chemotherapy regimens. Materials and Methods Twenty-two patients with ES-SCLC treated with 500 mg single-agent apatinib as subsequent-line regimen in our institution from November 2016 to August 2018 were enrolled in the study. The primary endpoint was progression-free survival (PFS). The secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS), objective response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR), and adverse events (AEs). Results Clinical outcomes included partial response in 3 patients (13.6%), stable disease in 18 patients (81.8%), and disease progression in 1 patient (4.5%), with an ORR of 13.6% and DCR of 95.5%. The median PFS and OS were 5.4 and 10.0 months, respectively. Apatinib demonstrated a manageable toxicity profile, with grade I–III secondary hypertension and proteinuria as the most common AEs. No grade IV and V AEs were observed among the patients. Multivariate analysis revealed secondary hypertension as an independent predictor of OS ( p = .047); however, the association became insignificant after Q correction ( p = .455). Conclusions Apatinib was safe and effective in the management of patients with ES-SCLC and can be considered as a treatment option after failure of at least two prior chemotherapy regimens. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier . NCT02995187 Implications for Practice This study indicated the acceptable toxicity profile and promising efficacy of apatinib in the management of patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer after failure from at least two prior chemotherapy regimens. Secondary hypertension can be a potential prognostic factor for apatinib treatment.

    The oncologist,2019年

    Yiyi Yu, Fenglin Liu, Weidong Chen, Wei Li, Qian Li, Huiqin Jiang, Yihong Sun, Tianshu Liu, Yong Fang, Zhenbin Shen, Yan Wang, Min Yan, Hui Cao, Yingbin Liu, Xuefei Wang, Yuehong Cui

    LicenseType:CC BY |

    预览  |  原文链接  |  全文  [ 浏览:0 下载:0  ]    

    Background. This multicenter, open-label study (NEO-CLASSIC) evaluated the efficacy and safety of oxaliplatin and capecitabine (XELOX), plus D2 gastrectomy, in localized resectable gastric cancer. Methods. Patients aged 18–75 years with histologicallyconfirmed gastric adenocarcinoma (stage T2–4a/N+M0) were given eight cycles of XELOX (four preoperatively, four postoperatively). Each 3-week cycle comprised capecitabine 1,000 mg/m2 twice daily on days 1–14 and oxaliplatin 130 mg/m2 on day 1. Curative D2 gastrectomy was scheduled 2–4 weeks after the last preoperative cycle. The primary objective of the study was to determine the objective response rate (ORR) of XELOX in the preoperative setting. Sample size was calculated by assuming that a minimum of 47 cases would be required to increase the ORR by 15% (from 40% to 55%). With an estimated 10% dropout rate, 55 patients would have to be recruited. Results. Fifty-five patients were enrolled, and one was excluded because of screening failure. R0 resections were achieved in 45 of 54 intent-to-treat patients (83.3%), and four patients received R1 resections (Fig. 1). There were no complete responses, 27 (50.0%) partial responses, 22 cases (40.7%) of stable disease, and 4 (7.4%) of progressive disease. The objective response rate was 50.0%. Median follow-up was 52.97 months; 30 patients (55.6%) had disease progression (Table 1), and median progression-free survival was 20.10 (95% confidence interval: 4.31—35.89) months; median overall survival was 30.77 months (95% confidence interval was not yet available) (Fig. 2). Fifty-four patients completed 209 cycles of preoperative chemotherapy; 42 patients received 133 cycles of postoperative chemotherapy (Table 3). The rate of grade 3–4 adverse events was 8.5% (29/342 cycles); the most frequent events were neutropenia (9/342 cycles) and leukopenia (4/342 cycles). Conclusion. These findings suggest that combination therapy with capecitabine and oxaliplatin as perioperative chemotherapy, followed by D2 gastrectomy, is effective and safe in latestage, locally advanced gastric cancer. Although enrollment exceeded the 47 patients required to identify an increase in the ORR by 15% (from 40% to 55%), results did not meet the primary endpoint.