Keith Bruce D
Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sault Area Hospital, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada.
BMC Cancer. 2008 Mar 28;8:84. doi: 10.1186/1471-2407-8-84.
Glucocorticoids are often used in the treatment of nonhematologic malignancy. This review summarizes the clinical evidence of the effect of glucocorticoid therapy on nonhematologic malignancy.
A systematic review of clinical studies of glucocorticoid therapy in patients with nonhematologic malignancy was undertaken. Only studies having endpoints of tumor response or tumor control or survival were included. PubMed, EMBASE, the Cochrane Register/Databases, conference proceedings (ASCO, AACR, ASTRO/ASTR, ESMO, ECCO) and other resources were used. Data was extracted using a standard form. There was quality assessment of each study. There was a narrative synthesis of information, with presentation of results in tables. Where appropriate, meta-analyses were performed using data from published reports and a fixed effect model.
Fifty four randomized controlled trials (RCTs), one meta-analysis, four phase l/ll trials and four case series met the eligibility criteria. Clinical trials of glucocorticoid monotherapy in breast and prostate cancer showed modest response rates. In advanced breast cancer meta-analyses, the addition of glucocorticoids to either chemotherapy or other endocrine therapy resulted in increased response rate, but not increased survival. In GI cancer, there was one RCT each of glucocorticoids vs. supportive care and chemotherapy +/- glucocorticoids; glucocorticoid effect was neutral. The only RCT found of chemotherapy +/- glucocorticoids, in which the glucocorticoid arm did worse, was in lung cancer. In glucocorticoid monotherapy, meta-analysis found that continuous high dose glucocorticoids had a detrimental effect on survival. The only other evidence, for a detrimental effect of glucocorticoid monotherapy, was in one of the two trials in lung cancer.
Glucocorticoid monotherapy has some benefit in breast and prostate cancer. In advanced breast cancer, the addition of glucocorticoids to other therapy does not change the long term outcome. In GI cancer, glucocorticoids most likely have a neutral effect. High dose continuous glucocorticoids have a detrimental effect in nonhematologic malignancy. Glucocorticoid therapy might have a deleterious impact in lung cancer.
糖皮质激素常用于非血液系统恶性肿瘤的治疗。本综述总结了糖皮质激素治疗对非血液系统恶性肿瘤疗效的临床证据。
对非血液系统恶性肿瘤患者糖皮质激素治疗的临床研究进行系统综述。仅纳入以肿瘤反应、肿瘤控制或生存为终点的研究。使用了PubMed、EMBASE、Cochrane注册库/数据库、会议论文集(美国临床肿瘤学会、美国癌症研究协会、美国放射肿瘤学会/放射肿瘤学、欧洲肿瘤内科学会、欧洲癌症研究与治疗组织)及其他资源。数据采用标准表格提取。对每项研究进行质量评估。对信息进行叙述性综合,并以表格形式呈现结果。在适当情况下,使用已发表报告的数据和固定效应模型进行荟萃分析。
54项随机对照试验(RCT)、1项荟萃分析、4项I/II期试验和4个病例系列符合纳入标准。乳腺癌和前列腺癌糖皮质激素单药治疗的临床试验显示缓解率适中。在晚期乳腺癌的荟萃分析中,在化疗或其他内分泌治疗中添加糖皮质激素可提高缓解率,但未提高生存率。在胃肠道癌中,分别有1项RCT比较了糖皮质激素与支持治疗以及化疗±糖皮质激素;糖皮质激素的效果为中性。唯一一项发现化疗±糖皮质激素时糖皮质激素组效果更差的RCT是在肺癌中。在糖皮质激素单药治疗的荟萃分析中,发现持续高剂量糖皮质激素对生存有不利影响。糖皮质激素单药治疗有不利影响的唯一其他证据来自肺癌的两项试验之一。
糖皮质激素单药治疗在乳腺癌和前列腺癌中有一定益处。在晚期乳腺癌中,在其他治疗中添加糖皮质激素不会改变长期预后。在胃肠道癌中,糖皮质激素很可能具有中性作用。高剂量持续糖皮质激素对非血液系统恶性肿瘤有不利影响。糖皮质激素治疗可能对肺癌有有害影响。