AI Article Synopsis

  • There is a crucial need to identify the best treatment options for patients with stage III-N2 nonsmall cell lung cancer that can potentially be surgically removed.
  • A systematic review of randomized controlled trials was conducted to analyze various treatment regimens, including chemotherapy with surgery, chemotherapy with radiotherapy, and chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery.
  • The findings suggest that chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery offers better disease-free survival and cost-effectiveness compared to the other treatment options, although there was no significant difference in overall survival.

Article Abstract

Introduction: There is a critical need to understand the optimal treatment regimen in patients with potentially resectable stage III-N2 nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

Methods: A systematic review of randomised controlled trials was carried out using a literature search including the CDSR, CENTRAL, DARE, HTA, EMBASE and MEDLINE bibliographic databases. Selected trials were used to perform a Bayesian fixed-effects network meta-analysis and economic modelling of treatment regimens relevant to current-day treatment options: chemotherapy plus surgery (CS), chemotherapy plus radiotherapy (CR) and chemoradiotherapy followed by surgery (CRS).

Findings: Six trials were prioritised for evidence synthesis. The fixed-effects network meta-analyses demonstrated an improvement in disease-free survival (DFS) for CRS CS and CRS CR of 0.34years (95% CI 0.02-0.65) and 0.32years (95% CI 0.05-0.58) respectively, over a 5-year period. No evidence of effect was observed in overall survival although point estimates favoured CRS. The probabilities that CRS had a greater mean survival time and greater probability of being alive than the reference treatment of CR at 5years were 89% and 86% respectively. Survival outcomes for CR and CS were essentially equivalent. The economic model calculated that CRS and CS had incremental cost-effectiveness ratios of £19 000/quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) and £78 000/QALY compared to CR. The probability that CRS generated more QALYs than CR and CS was 94%.

Interpretation: CRS provides an extended time in a disease-free state leading to improved cost-effectiveness over CR and CS in potentially resectable stage III-N2 NSCLC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10068518PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00299-2022DOI Listing

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