articleNew England Journal of MedicineSep 8, 2017BRONZE OA

Durvalumab after Chemoradiotherapy in Stage III Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer

Florida Hospital Cancer Institute

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Most patients with locally advanced, unresectable, non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) have disease progression despite definitive chemoradiotherapy (chemotherapy plus concurrent radiation therapy). This phase 3 study compared the anti-programmed death ligand 1 antibody durvalumab as consolidation therapy with placebo in patients with stage III NSCLC who did not have disease progression after two or more cycles of platinum-based chemoradiotherapy.

Methods

We randomly assigned patients, in a 2:1 ratio, to receive durvalumab (at a dose of 10 mg per kilogram of body weight intravenously) or placebo every 2 weeks for up to 12 months. The study drug was administered 1 to 42 days after the patients had received chemoradiotherapy. The coprimary end points were progression-free survival (as assessed by means of blinded independent central review) and overall survival (unplanned for the interim analysis). Secondary end points included 12-month and 18-month progression-free survival rates, the objective response rate, the duration of response, the time to death or distant metastasis, and safety.

Citation impact

4,500
total citations
FWCI
181.35
Percentile
100%
References
22
Citations per year

Authors

30

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Durvalumab
  • Medicine
  • Hazard ratio
  • Chemoradiotherapy
  • Lung cancer
  • Internal medicine
  • Interim analysis
  • Placebo
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding