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A systematic meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials for adjuvant chemotherapy for localized resectable soft-tissue sarcoma Nabeel Pervaiz Nigel Colterjohn Forough Farrokhyar Richard Tozer Alvaro Figueredo Michelle Ghert
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Background Systemic treatment for localized STS controversial Doxorubicin-based chemotherapy Very little Level I evidence to direct clinical practice Prospective randomized studies have had discrepant results Studies are limited by sample size
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Background Sarcoma Meta-analysis Collaboration (SMAC)--- originated at Hamilton Regional Cancer Centre Landmark publication, Lancet 1997 14 RCTs Results: –Hazard ratio 0.75 (95% CI.64-0.87) for overall recurrence –Hazard radio 0.89 (95% CI 0.76-1.03)* for survival (absolute benefit of 4%) –*not statistically significant
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Ten years later… Further published RCTs Intensification of doxorubicin dosage and addition of ifosfamide to regimens
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Objective To update the 1997 meta-analysis with data from subsequent published randomized controlled trials Increase statistical power and narrow confidence intervals
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Methods: Study Identification Databases: Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane Search criteria: sarcoma, chemotherapy, randomized controlled trial Over 700 results Inclusion criteria: soft-tissue, localized, resectable, control arm: no chemotherapy, adult Exclusion criteria: bone sarcoma, advanced disease, no control arm, pediatric (rhabdomyoscaromca), non- randomized
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Study Evaluation Studies evaluated by 2 independent reviewers Modified Detsky Quality Scale for Randomized trials Interobserver reliability
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Outcome measures Local recurrence Distant recurrence Overall recurrence Overall survival
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Statistical Methods Funnel plot for publication bias Test for heterogeneity between studies Pooled odds ratio 95% confidence intervals Fixed effect method (statistical control for non-analzyed variables)
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Results 4 studies met inclusion and exclusion criteria, 385 patients All 4 studies scored over 75% on Detsky Scale (reliability 94%) Total 18 studies and 1953 patients One study: neo-adjuvant vs control (analysis performed with and without data) Mean follow-up 4.9 years (3.4-7.8 years)
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Chemotherapy regimens SMAC: –13 Doxorubicin based, 1 Doxorubicin and Ifosfamide Additional trials: –All 4 trials Doxorubicin and Ifosfamide Dosage intensities varied
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Funnel Plot
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Local Recurrence 17 trials 1700 patients 296 events Overall hazard ratio of 0.73 (95% CI: 0.56- 0.94) in favor of chemotherapy Absolute risk reduction of 4% (15% vs. 19%) Number needed to treat: 25
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Odds ratio for local recurrence Test for heterogeneity Q=15.81, df=16, p=0.4664
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Distant Recurrence 17 trials 1700 patients 553 events overall hazard ratio of 0.65 (95% CI: 0.53- 0.80) in favor of chemotherapy Absolute risk reduction 9% (28% vs 37%) Number need to treat: 12
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Odds ratio for distant recurrence Test for heterogeneity Q=7.8451, df=16, p=0.9533
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Overall Recurrence 18 trials 1747 patients 884 events Overall hazard ratio of 0.67 (95% CI: 0.56- 0.82) in favor of chemotherapy Absolute risk reduction 10% (46% vs 56%) Number needed to treat: 10
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Odds ratio for overall recurrence Test for heterogeneity Q=10.2308, df=17, p=0.8937
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Overall Survival 18 trials 1953 patients 829 deaths overall hazard ratio of 0.77 (95% CI: 0.64- 0.93*) in favor of chemotherapy Absolute risk reduction of 6% (40% vs 46%) Number needed to treat: 17 *note: upper limit of confidence interval in SMAC 1.03
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Odds ratio for overall survival Test for heterogeneity Q=15.9325, df=17, p=0.5286
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Discussion Additional 385 patients narrowed confidence intervals Overall survival became statistically significant Definite but minimal benefit of chemotherapy in reducing LR, DR, OR and overall survival (6% risk reduction, 40% vs 46%)
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Statistical methodologies SMAC accumulated individual data for each patient Modern meta-analysis uses fixed effect method to control for non-analyzed variables Individual data not required However, time-dependent outcomes not possible without individual data points
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Chemotherapy regimens Addition of ifosfamide in later studies Therefore difference in treatment regimens between the 18 studies Test for heterogeneity presumably controls for these differences
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Subgroup analysis Not performed due to lack of individual data points HOWEVER, subgroup analysis can be flawed –Small sample size –Differences found due to chance alone
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EORTC 62931 Presented at ASCO meeting June 2007 RCT adjuvant chemo (Dox and Ifos) vs. control in resectable STS 351 patients recruited 1995-2003 5 yr RFS 52% in both groups, OS 64% (control) and 69% (chemo) Conclusion: “The hypotheses that adjuvant CT improves RFS and OS…can both be rejected”
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EORTC 62931 Data not available for inclusion in this analysis (authors felt that release of information would be premature)
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Conclusions Despite limitations, valuable Level I evidence 1953 randomized patients with localized resectable STS
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Conclusions Absolute risk reductions: –Local recurrence 4% –Distant recurrence 9% –Overall recurrence 10% –Overall survival 6% (40% vs. 46%) Individual patient care: These real but small benefits must be weighed against the toxicities associated with intensive chemotherapy
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1.Brodowicz et al, Sarcoma 2000 2.Frustaci et al, JCO 2001 3.Gortzak et al, EJC 2001 4.Petrioli et al, AJCO 2002
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Neoadjuvant vs. Adjuvant One trial, Gortzak et al, EJC 2001: Neo- adjuvant chemotherapy Analysis performed with and without data from this study Confidence intervals and statistical outcome not statistically different Therefore data included to increase statistical power
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