Publicaciones científicas

Induction platinum-based chemotherapy followed by radical hyperfractionated radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy in the treatment of locally advanced non-small-cell carcinoma of the lung

01-abr-1999 | Revista: American Journal of Clinical Oncology

López-Picazo J.M., Azinovic I., Aristu J.J., Martínez Monge R., Moreno Jiménez M., Calvo Aller E., Beltrán C., Aramendía J.M., Rebollo J., Brugarolas A.


This study evaluated tolerance, local control, and short-term survival in patients with locally advanced non-small-cell lung carcinoma treated with induction chemotherapy followed by radical hyperfractionated radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy.

Thirty-one patients with stage IIIa (N2) or IIIb tumors were treated with cis-platinum-based induction chemotherapy for 1 to 4 courses followed by radical hyperfractionated radiotherapy (69.6 Gy) with concurrent chemotherapy given at the beginning and end of radiotherapy. Induction chemotherapy produced no complete responses and 18 (58%) partial responses. After completion of radiotherapy, 4 patients had complete response (13%) and 23 patients (74%) partial response. The patterns of failure were as follows: intrathoracic, 6 patients (22%); intrathoracic + distant metastasis, 6 patients (22%); distant metastasis without thoracic failure, 5 patients (19%). Six patients of the 12 with intrathoracic failure experienced in-field radiotherapy pure local failure. At the time of this analysis, 10 patients were alive and well (4 complete and 6 partial responders). Actuarial survival projected at 39 months is 35%. No benefit was observed for those patients responding to induction chemotherapy. Toxicity was as follows: grade III neutropenic fever in 4 patients (13%), grade IV neutropenia in 13 patients (42%), pneumonia in 6 patients (19%), grade III esophagitis in 4 patients (13%) and severe clinical pneumonitis in 1 patient (3%).

Induction chemotherapy followed by chemoradiotherapy is feasible, and the preliminary results are encouraging. Complete response after radiotherapy appeared to be related to short-term disease-free survival, and decisions based on the response to chemotherapy may be equivocal.

CITA DEL ARTÍCULO Am J Clin Oncol. 1999 Apr;22(2):203-8