Department of Oncology, Addenbrooke's Hospital, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK; NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Cambridge, UK; Cambridge Breast Cancer Research Unit, Cambridge, UK.
Warwick Clinical Trials Unit, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Lancet Oncol. 2017 Jun;18(6):755-769. doi: 10.1016/S1470-2045(17)30319-4. Epub 2017 May 4.
The tAnGo trial was designed to investigate the potential role of gemcitabine when added to anthracycline and taxane-containing adjuvant chemotherapy for early breast cancer. When this study was developed, gemcitabine had shown significant activity in metastatic breast cancer, and there was evidence of a favourable interaction with paclitaxel.
tAnGo was an international, open-label, randomised, phase 3 superiority trial that enrolled women aged 18 years or older with newly diagnosed, early-stage breast cancer who had a definite indication for chemotherapy, any nodal status, any hormone receptor status, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0-1, and adequate bone marrow, hepatic, and renal function. Women were recruited from 127 clinical centres and hospitals in the UK and Ireland, and randomly assigned (1:1) to one of two treatment regimens: epirubicin, cyclophosphamide, and paclitaxel (four cycles of 90 mg/m intravenously administered epirubicin and 600 mg/m intravenously administered cyclophosphamide on day 1 every 3 weeks, followed by four cycles of 175 mg/m paclitaxel as a 3 h infusion on day 1 every 3 weeks) or epirubicin, cyclophosphamide, and paclitaxel plus gemcitabine (the same chemotherapy regimen as the other group, with the addition of 1250 mg/m gemcitabine to the paclitaxel cycles, administered intravenously as a 0·5 h infusion on days 1 and 8 every 3 weeks). Patients were randomly assigned by a central computerised deterministic minimisation procedure, with stratification by country, age, radiotherapy intent, nodal status, and oestrogen receptor and HER-2 status. The primary endpoint was disease-free survival and the trial aimed to detect 5% differences in 5-year disease-free survival between the treatment groups. Recruitment completed in 2004 and this is the final, intention-to-treat analysis. This trial is registered with EudraCT (2004-002927-41), ISRCTN (51146252), and ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT00039546).
Between Aug 22, 2001, and Nov 26, 2004, 3152 patients were enrolled and randomly assigned to epirubicin, cyclophosphamide, paclitaxel, and gemcitabine (gemcitabine group; n=1576) or to epirubicin, cyclophosphamide, and paclitaxel (control group; n=1576). 11 patients (six in the gemcitabine group and five in the control group) were ineligible because of pre-existing metastases and were therefore excluded from the analysis. At this protocol-specified final analysis (median follow-up 10 years [IQR 10-10]), 1087 disease-free survival events and 914 deaths had occurred. Disease-free survival did not differ significantly between the treatment groups at 10 years (65% [63-68] in the gemcitabine group vs 65% [62-67] in the control group), and median disease-free survival was not reached (adjusted hazard ratio 0·97 [95% CI 0·86-1·10], p=0·64). Toxicity, dose intensity, and a detailed safety substudy showed both regimens to be safe, deliverable, and tolerable. Grade 3 and 4 toxicities were reported at expected levels in both groups. The most common were neutropenia (527 [34%] of 1565 patients in the gemcitabine group vs 412 [26%] of 1567 in the control group), myalgia and arthralgia (207 [13%] vs 186 [12%]), fatigue (207 [13%] vs 152 [10%]), infection (202 [13%] vs 141 [9%]), vomiting (143 [9%] vs 108 [7%]), and nausea (132 [8%] vs 102 [7%]).
The addition of gemcitabine to anthracycline and taxane-based adjuvant chemotherapy at this dose and schedule confers no therapeutic advantage in terms of disease-free survival in early breast cancer, although it can cause increased toxicity. Therefore, gemcitabine has not been added to standard adjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer for any subgroup.
Cancer Research UK core funding for Clinical Trials Unit at the University of Birmingham, Eli Lilly, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and Pfizer.
tAnGo 试验旨在研究吉西他滨在蒽环类和紫杉烷类联合辅助化疗治疗早期乳腺癌中的潜在作用。在这项研究开展时,吉西他滨在转移性乳腺癌中显示出显著的活性,并且有证据表明其与紫杉醇有良好的相互作用。
tAnGo 是一项国际性、开放性、随机、III 期优效性试验,纳入了年龄在 18 岁及以上、新诊断为早期乳腺癌、有明确化疗指征、任何淋巴结状态、任何激素受体状态、Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group 体能状态为 0-1、骨髓、肝和肾功能充足的女性患者。这些患者来自英国和爱尔兰的 127 家临床中心和医院,随机分配(1:1)到两种治疗方案组之一:表柔比星、环磷酰胺和紫杉醇(90mg/m 表柔比星静脉输注,每 3 周 1 次,600mg/m 环磷酰胺静脉输注,每 3 周 1 次,随后每 3 周 1 次 175mg/m 紫杉醇静脉输注 3 小时)或表柔比星、环磷酰胺和紫杉醇联合吉西他滨(另一组相同的化疗方案,在紫杉醇周期中添加 1250mg/m 吉西他滨,每 3 周静脉输注 1 天和 8 天,每次 0.5 小时)。患者通过中央计算机化确定性最小化程序进行随机分组,分层因素包括国家、年龄、放疗意向、淋巴结状态以及雌激素受体和 HER-2 状态。主要终点是无病生存期,试验旨在检测两组之间 5 年无病生存期的 5%差异。招募工作于 2004 年完成,这是最终的、意向治疗分析。这项试验在 EudraCT(2004-002927-41)、ISRCTN(51146252)和 ClinicalTrials.gov(NCT00039546)注册。
2001 年 8 月 22 日至 2004 年 11 月 26 日期间,纳入了 3152 名患者并随机分配到表柔比星、环磷酰胺、紫杉醇和吉西他滨(吉西他滨组;n=1576)或表柔比星、环磷酰胺和紫杉醇(对照组;n=1576)。由于存在预先存在的转移,11 名患者(吉西他滨组 6 名,对照组 5 名)不符合入组条件,因此被排除在分析之外。在这项方案规定的最终分析(中位随访 10 年[IQR 10-10])中,发生了 1087 例无病生存事件和 914 例死亡。10 年时无病生存期在两组之间没有显著差异(吉西他滨组 65%[63-68] vs 对照组 65%[62-67]),中位无病生存期未达到(调整后的危险比 0.97[95%CI 0.86-1.10],p=0.64)。毒性、剂量强度和详细的安全性亚研究表明,两种方案均安全、可耐受。两组的 3 级和 4 级毒性发生率均处于预期水平。最常见的是中性粒细胞减少症(吉西他滨组 1565 例中的 527 例[34%] vs 对照组 1567 例中的 412 例[26%])、肌痛和关节痛(吉西他滨组 207 例[13%] vs 对照组 186 例[12%])、疲劳(吉西他滨组 207 例[13%] vs 对照组 152 例[10%])、感染(吉西他滨组 202 例[13%] vs 对照组 141 例[9%])、呕吐(吉西他滨组 143 例[9%] vs 对照组 108 例[7%])和恶心(吉西他滨组 132 例[8%] vs 对照组 102 例[7%])。
在蒽环类和紫杉烷类为基础的辅助化疗中,以这种剂量和方案添加吉西他滨在无病生存期方面没有带来治疗优势,尽管它可能会增加毒性。因此,吉西他滨在乳腺癌的任何亚组中都没有被添加到标准辅助化疗中。
英国伯明翰大学临床试验单位的癌症研究 UK 核心资金,礼来、百时美施贵宝和辉瑞。