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Taxanes with anthracyclines as first‐line chemotherapy for metastatic breast carcinoma
Author(s) -
Bria Emilio,
Giannarelli Diana,
Felici Alessandra,
Peters William P.,
Nisticò Cecilia,
Vanni Barbara,
Cuppone Federica,
Cognetti Francesco,
Terzoli Edmondo
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.052
H-Index - 304
eISSN - 1097-0142
pISSN - 0008-543X
DOI - 10.1002/cncr.20757
Subject(s) - medicine , neutropenia , relative risk , chemotherapy , febrile neutropenia , confidence interval , oncology , meta analysis , gastroenterology
BACKGROUND The magnitude of the benefit of adding taxanes to anthracyclines in first‐line chemotherapy for metastatic breast carcinoma is still unclear. The authors performed a pooled analysis as well as a meta‐analysis of all Phase III trials, to determine whether the combination of anthracyclines plus taxanes provided an advantage over standard anthracyclines‐based regimens. METHODS All Phase III peer‐reviewed published or presented trials were considered eligible. A pooled analysis (Method A) and a literature‐based meta‐analysis (Method B) were accomplished, and event‐based relative risk ratios (RR A–B ) with 95% confidence intervals were derived. Both analyses were performed to examine for significant differences in time to disease progression (TTP), overall response rate (ORR), overall survival (OS), complete response rate (CR), neutropenia, and febrile neutropenia (FN). For both analyses, a heterogeneity test was applied. RESULTS Seven trials (2805 patients) were gathered. When data were pooled and plotted, significant differences in favor of taxanes were seen for ORR (RR A–B 1.21, P < 0.001), CR (RR A 2.04; RR B 1.81, P < 0.001), even though they caused a significant increase in neutropenia (RR A 1.19; RR B 1.15, P < 0.001) and FN (RR A 2.82; RR B 3.44, P < 0.001). A borderline significance in favor of taxanes was seen in TTP (RR A 1.10, P = 0.05; RR B 1.06, P = 0.07). A nonsignificant trend for taxanes was found in OS. No significant heterogeneity (except for neutropenia, P < 0.01) was observed. CONCLUSIONS The adjunction of taxanes to anthracyclines in first‐line chemotherapy for metastatic breast carcinoma yielded a significant benefit in activity (ORR, CR), a slight advantage in TTP, and a trend in OS, although with a significant cost in hematologic toxicity. Cancer 2005. © 2005 American Cancer Society.

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