articlePubMedJul 1, 2002Closed access

Low ERCC1 expression correlates with prolonged survival after cisplatin plus gemcitabine chemotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer.

University of Southern California · USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center · +2 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed inpubmed

Abstract

Results

ERCC1 expression was detectable in all tumors. There were no significant differences in ERCC1 levels by gender, age, performance status, weight loss, or tumor stage. The overall response rate was 44.7%. There were no significant associations between ERCC1 expression and response. Median overall survival was significantly longer in patients with low ERCC1 expression tumors (61.6 weeks; 95% confidence interval, 42.4-80.7 weeks) compared to patients with high expression tumors (20.4 weeks, 95% confidence interval, 6.9-33.9 weeks). ERCC1 expression, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, and presence of weight loss were significant prognostic factors for survival in a Cox proportional hazards multivariable analysis.

Conclusions

These data suggest that ERCC1 expression is a predictive factor for survival after CDDP/Gem therapy in advanced NSCLC. Although there was a trend toward decreased response with high ERCC1 mRNA levels, this difference failed to reach statistical significance. This result may reflect the impact of Gem and the requirement for ERCC1 expression for CDDP/Gem synergism or may be attributable to the relatively small patient sample size in this study. Prospective studies of ERCC1 as a predictive marker for activity of CDDP-based regimens in NSCLC are warranted.

Citation impact

671
total citations
FWCI
7.25
Percentile
100%
References
41
Citations per year

Authors

14

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • ERCC1
  • Gemcitabine
  • Cisplatin
  • Lung cancer
  • Medicine
  • Chemotherapy
  • Internal medicine
  • Oncology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
No related works found for this paper.