Therapeutic Advances in Medical Oncology (Apr 2020)

Second-line treatment in patients with advanced extra-pulmonary poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma: a systematic review and meta-analysis

  • Mairéad G. McNamara,
  • Melissa Frizziero,
  • Timothy Jacobs,
  • Angela Lamarca,
  • Richard A. Hubner,
  • Juan W. Valle,
  • Eitan Amir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/1758835920915299
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Background: There is no standard second-line treatment for patients with advanced extra-pulmonary poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma (EP-PD-NEC). This study explored data evaluating second-line treatment in these patients. Methods: A search of MEDLINE and EMBASE identified studies reporting survival and/or response data for patients with EP-PD-NEC receiving second-line therapy. Association between various factors (age, gender, ECOG performance status, primary tumour location, morphology, Ki-67, treatment and grade 3/4 haematological toxicity) and response rate (RR), progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were assessed with a mixed effects meta-regression weighted by individual study sample size. Due to a small sample size, associations were reported quantitatively, based on magnitude of beta coefficient rather than statistical significance. Results: Of 83 identified studies, 19 were eligible, including 4 prospective and 15 retrospective studies. Analysis comprised 582 patients, with a median number of 19 patients in each study (range 5–100). Median age was 59 years (range 53–66). Median RR was 18% (range 0–50; 0% for single-agent everolimus, temozolomide, topotecan; 50% with amrubicin), median PFS was 2.5 months (range 1.15–6.0) and median OS was 7.64 months (range 3.2–22.0). Studies with a higher proportion of patients with a Ki-67>55% had lower RR (β = –0.73) and shorter OS (β = –0.82). Conclusion: Second-line therapy for patients with advanced EP-PD-NEC has limited efficacy and the variety of regimens used is diverse. Ki-67>55% is associated with worse outcomes. Prospective randomised studies are warranted to enable exploration of new treatment strategies.