A Randomized Trial Comparing Preoperative Chemotherapy Plus Surgery with Surgery Alone in Patients with Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer

R. Rosell, José Gómez‐Codina, Carlos Camps(Universitat de Barcelona), J Maestre, Jose Padille, Antonio Cantó(Universitat de Barcelona), José Luís Mate(Universitat de Barcelona), Shanrong Li, Jorge Roig(Universitat de Barcelona), Ángel Olazábal(Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol), Mercedes Canela, Aurelio Ariza(Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol), Z Skácel, Jose Morera-Prat(Universitat de Barcelona), Albert Abad(Hospital Universitari Germans Trias i Pujol)
New England Journal of Medicine
January 20, 1994
Cited by 1,269Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The efficacy of surgery for patients with non-small-cell lung cancer is limited, although recent studies suggest that preoperative chemotherapy may improve survival. We conducted a randomized trial to examine the possible benefit of preoperative chemotherapy and surgery for the treatment of patients with non-small-cell lung cancer. METHODS: We studied 60 patients (59 men and 1 woman) with stage IIIA non-small-cell lung cancer. The patients were randomly assigned to receive either surgery alone or three courses of chemotherapy (6 mg of mitomycin per square meter of body-surface area, 3 g of ifosfamide per square meter, and 50 mg of cisplatin per square meter) given intravenously at three-week intervals and followed by surgery. All patients received mediastinal radiation after surgery. The resected tumors were evaluated by means of K-ras oncogene analysis and flow cytometry. RESULTS: The median period of survival was 26 months in the patients treated with chemotherapy plus surgery, as compared with 8 months in the patients treated with surgery alone (P < 0.001); the median period of disease-free survival was 20 months in the former group, as compared with 5 months in the latter (P < 0.001). The rate of recurrence was 56 percent in the group treated with chemotherapy plus surgery and 74 percent in the group treated with surgery alone. The prevalence of mutated K-ras oncogenes was 15 percent among the patients receiving preoperative chemotherapy and 42 percent among those treated with surgery alone (P = 0.05). Most of the patients treated with chemotherapy plus surgery had tumors that consisted of diploid cells, whereas the patients treated with surgery alone had tumors with aneuploid cells. CONCLUSIONS: Preoperative chemotherapy increases the median survival in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer.


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