Patients receiving chemotherapy for advanced lung cancer are devastated when told that their disease has progressed, he commented. “What we see with the results of this study is that we can actually double the chance that they don’t have to hear that bad news in the first year of treatment.”
“We hope that the results seen with progression-free survival translate to improved overall survival. If and when that is shown, I think we will clearly have a new standard of care for the front-line treatment of squamous cell NSCLC,” concluded Dr. Graham, who is also medical director at the Levine Cancer Institute in Charlotte, N.C.
Study details
With a median follow-up of 17.1 months in IMpower131, median progression-free survival was 5.6 months with chemotherapy alone and 6.3 months when atezolizumab was added to chemotherapy (hazard ratio, 0.71; P = .0001).