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Title: Etoposide plus cisplatin followed by thoracic radiation for stage IIIB non-small cell lung cancer: MAOP study 2188. Author: Lokich J, Auerbach M, Essig L, Fryer J, Fryer D. Journal: J Infus Chemother; 1995; 5(2):70-2. PubMed ID: 8521238. Abstract: Thirty-five patients with stage III B non-small cell lung cancer were treated with the combination of cisplatin (CDDP) 30 mg/M2/day and etoposide (VP16-213) 75 mg/M2/day administered as a 72-hour infusion. Twenty evaluable patients (67%) received subsequent thoracic radiation as definitive regional therapy following a clinical response or stable disease status. Complete plus partial responses to chemotherapy were observed in 15 patients (5CR and 10PR or 44%). Of the 20 patients who received radiation, six responded with five transitioning from stable disease to partial (2) or complete (3) responses. The overall response rate to the combined sequential chemotherapy plus radiation was therefore 20/35 or 59% with eight complete responders. Histopathology influenced the response rate to chemotherapy (53% versus 30% for epidermoid versus adenocarcinomas, respectively), but following radiation, the response rates were similar for the two pathologic subtypes (73% versus 71%). Median overall survival was 363 days with 20% of patients alive at 13 to 45 months. The response rate for CDDP plus VP16-213 chemotherapy administered as a 72-hour infusion was superior for stage III B non-small cell lung cancer compared with stage IV disease as previously reported by the Mid Atlantic Oncology Program (44% versus 25%). This difference between stage III B and stage IV was also reflected in median survival (363 days versus 190 days). The sequential addition of radiation therapy to this chemotherapy regimen is feasible in stage III B disease with a small proportion of patients demonstrating long-term survival.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]