Cisplatin-Containing Combinations Associate with Survival in Women from Appalachian Kentucky with Metastatic, Persistent, or Recurrent Uterine Cervix Cancer

Charles A. Kunos, Rachel W. Miller, Denise Fabian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Prior preclinical studies showed promising antitumor activity and an acceptable safety profile associated with radiopharmaceuticals for patients with metastatic, persistent, or recurrent uterine cervix cancers. Whether the addition of a radiopharmaceutical to chemotherapy would significantly increase progression-free survival in such patients is untested. Our retrospective study sought to associate the line of treatment and progression-free survival as benchmarks for next-generation radiopharmaceutical development. Methods: We grouped metastatic, persistent, or recurrent uterine cervix cancer patients not amenable to curable surgery or radiotherapy between 2002 and 2023 by the line of doublet, triplet, and quadruplet chemotherapy or another intervention. After the first-line treatment, patients were monitored for radiographic progression every three months for up to three years. The primary endpoints were the first and any second or third progression-free survival intervals. Results: A total of 127 patients contributed demographic, tumor, line of treatment, and outcome data with a median follow-up of 18 months (25–75% interquartile range: 9 to 37 months). After the first-line treatment, 113 patients had local or distant progression or died from any cause, most often death from the disease (67%). Median progression-free survivals were 5.5 months (95% confidence interval: 4.8–6.0 months), 5.3 months (95% confidence interval: 4.5–6.3 months), and 3.0 months (95% confidence interval: 2.1–3.7 months) for the first-, second-, and third-line treatments, respectively. For a first-line cisplatin-containing regimen, the median progression-free survival was 6.5 months (95% confidence interval: 5.5–7.7 months). Conclusions: This study highlights the limited efficacy of current treatments for metastatic, persistent, or recurrent uterine cancer patients. A five-month progression-free survival might serve as a benchmark for the development of novel therapies in clinical efficacy trials, such as radiopharmaceuticals.

Original languageEnglish
Article number3319
JournalCancers
Volume16
Issue number19
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.

Funding

This work was supported by NCI grant P30 CA177558, which supports the Biostatistics and Bioinformatics and the Cancer Research Informatics Shared Resource Facilities of the University of Kentucky Markey Comprehensive Cancer Center.

FundersFunder number
University of Kentucky Markey Comprehensive Cancer Center
National Childhood Cancer Registry – National Cancer InstituteP30 CA177558

    Keywords

    • Appalachian
    • cervical cancer
    • cervix
    • cisplatin
    • metastatic
    • persistent
    • radiopharmaceuticals
    • recurrent
    • survival

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Oncology
    • Cancer Research

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