Efficacy of Reduced-Intensity Chemotherapy With Oxaliplatin and Capecitabine on Quality of Life and Cancer Control Among Older and Frail Patients With Advanced Gastroesophageal Cancer

Peter Hall(University of Leeds), Daniel Swinson(National Health Service), David A. Cairns(University of Leeds), Justin S. Waters(National Health Service), Russell Petty(University of Dundee), Christine Allmark(National Health Service), Sharon Ruddock(University of Leeds), Stephen Falk(At Bristol), Jonathan Wadsley(Weston Park Cancer Centre), Rajarshi Roy(National Health Service), Tania Tillett(Royal United Hospital), J. J. Nicoll(National Health Service), Sebastian Cummins(National Health Service), Joseph Mano(National Health Service), Simon Grumett(National Health Service), Zuzana Stokes(National Health Service), Konstantinos-Velios Kamposioras(National Health Service), Anirban Chatterjee(National Health Service), Angel Garcia(Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board), Tom Waddell(National Health Service), Kamalnayan Guptal(National Health Service), Nick Maisey(National Health Service), Mohammed Q. Khan(National Health Service), Jo Dent(National Health Service), Simon Lord(University of Oxford), Ann Crossley(National Health Service), Eszter Katona(University of Leeds), Helen Marshall(University of Leeds), Heike I. Grabsch(University of Leeds), Galina Velikova(University of Leeds), Pei Loo Ow(University of Leeds), Catherine Handforth(University of Leeds), Helen Howard(University of Leeds), Michel Seymour(National Health Service), GO2 Trial Investigators(Clinical Trial Investigators), Eleanor James(Clinical Trial Investigators), Sue Cheeseman(Clinical Trial Investigators), Tom Roques(Clinical Trial Investigators), Nick Reed(Clinical Trial Investigators), Charles Candish(Clinical Trial Investigators), D. Fyfe(Clinical Trial Investigators), Kim Last(Clinical Trial Investigators), Richard Ellis(Clinical Trial Investigators), Lesley Samuel(Clinical Trial Investigators), Rebecca Herbertson(Clinical Trial Investigators), Louise Medley(Clinical Trial Investigators), Kinnari Patel(Clinical Trial Investigators), David Sherriff(Clinical Trial Investigators), Angus Robinson(Clinical Trial Investigators), Pavel Bezecny(Clinical Trial Investigators), Dunca Wilkins(Clinical Trial Investigators), Adam McGeoch(Clinical Trial Investigators), D. Propper(Clinical Trial Investigators), Olwyn Williams(Clinical Trial Investigators), Serena Hilman(Clinical Trial Investigators), Sherif Raouf(Clinical Trial Investigators), Claire Hobbs(Clinical Trial Investigators), J.A. Parkinson(Clinical Trial Investigators), Nick Wadd(Clinical Trial Investigators), W Saku(Clinical Trial Investigators), Victori Kunene(Clinical Trial Investigators), C Askill(Clinical Trial Investigators), Arshad Jamil(Clinical Trial Investigators), Emma Cattell(Clinical Trial Investigators), Lauren Gorf(Clinical Trial Investigators), Vallipuram Vigneswaran(Clinical Trial Investigators), Erica Beaumont(Clinical Trial Investigators), Syed M. Zubair(Clinical Trial Investigators), Elin Jones(Clinical Trial Investigators), Nicholas Reed(Clinical Trial Investigators), Alaaeldin Shablak(Clinical Trial Investigators), George Bozas(Clinical Trial Investigators), Sheela Rao(Clinical Trial Investigators), Michael Bennet(Clinical Trial Investigators), Joanne Askey(Clinical Trial Investigators), Gareth Griffiths(Clinical Trial Investigators), Sally Clive(Clinical Trial Investigators), Vanessa Potter(Clinical Trial Investigators), Jean Roger Le Gall(Clinical Trial Investigators), Chris Twelves(Clinical Trial Investigators), M.R. Sydes(Clinical Trial Investigators), Juan W. Valle(Clinical Trial Investigators), Jo Webster(Clinical Trial Investigators), Marc Jones(Clinical Trial Investigators), Fiona Collinson(Clinical Trial Investigators), Julia Brown(Clinical Trial Investigators), Louise Brook(Clinical Trial Investigators)
JAMA Oncology
May 13, 2021
Cited by 189Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Importance: Older and/or frail patients are underrepresented in landmark cancer trials. Tailored research is needed to address this evidence gap. Objective: The GO2 randomized clinical trial sought to optimize chemotherapy dosing in older and/or frail patients with advanced gastroesophageal cancer, and explored baseline geriatric assessment (GA) as a tool for treatment decision-making. Design, Setting, and Participants: This multicenter, noninferiority, open-label randomized trial took place at oncology clinics in the United Kingdom with nurse-led geriatric health assessment. Patients were recruited for whom full-dose combination chemotherapy was considered unsuitable because of advanced age and/or frailty. Interventions: There were 2 randomizations that were performed: CHEMO-INTENSITY compared oxaliplatin/capecitabine at Level A (oxaliplatin 130 mg/m2 on day 1, capecitabine 625 mg/m2 twice daily on days 1-21, on a 21-day cycle), Level B (doses 0.8 times A), or Level C (doses 0.6 times A). Alternatively, if the patient and clinician agreed the indication for chemotherapy was uncertain, the patient could instead enter CHEMO-BSC, comparing Level C vs best supportive care. Main Outcomes and Measures: First, broad noninferiority of the lower doses vs reference (Level A) was assessed using a permissive boundary of 34 days reduction in progression-free survival (PFS) (hazard ratio, HR = 1.34), selected as acceptable by a forum of patients and clinicians. Then, the patient experience was compared using Overall Treatment Utility (OTU), which combines efficacy, toxic effects, quality of life, and patient value/acceptability. For CHEMO-BSC, the main outcome measure was overall survival. Results: A total of 514 patients entered CHEMO-INTENSITY, of whom 385 (75%) were men and 299 (58%) were severely frail, with median age 76 years. Noninferior PFS was confirmed for Levels B vs A (HR = 1.09 [95% CI, 0.89-1.32]) and C vs A (HR = 1.10 [95% CI, 0.90-1.33]). Level C produced less toxic effects and better OTU than A or B. No subgroup benefited from higher doses: Level C produced better OTU even in younger or less frail patients. A total of 45 patients entered the CHEMO-BSC randomization: overall survival was nonsignificantly longer with chemotherapy: median 6.1 vs 3.0 months (HR = 0.69 [95% CI, 0.32-1.48], P = .34). In multivariate analysis in 522 patients with all variables available, baseline frailty, quality of life, and neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio were independently associated with OTU, and can be combined in a model to estimate the probability of different outcomes. Conclusions and Relevance: This phase 3 randomized clinical trial found that reduced-intensity chemotherapy provided a better patient experience without significantly compromising cancer control and should be considered for older and/or frail patients. Baseline geriatric assessment can help predict the utility of chemotherapy but did not identify a group benefiting from higher-dose treatment. Trial Registration: isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN44687907.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis