Affiliations of authors: S. M. Lippman (Departments of Clinical Cancer Prevention and Thoracic/Head and Neck Medical Oncology), J. J. Lee, H. W. Kim (Department of Biostatistics), S. E. Benner, R. Lotan, W. K. Hong (Department of Thoracic/Head and Neck Medical Oncology), J. A. Roth (Department of Thoracic Surgery), The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston; D. D. Karp, W. Fry, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group, Brookline, MA; E. E. Vokes, S. L. Graziano, Cancer and Leukemia Group B, Chicago, IL; G. E. Goodman, D. R. Gandara, Southwest Oncology Group, San Antonio, TX; F. R. Khuri, G. Okawara, Radiation Therapy Oncology Group, Philadelphia, PA; R. Marks, C. L. Woodhouse, North Central Cancer Treatment Group, Rochester, MN; R. J. Winn, B. Williams, C. Perez, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center Community Clinical Oncology Program.
Correspondence to: Scott M. Lippman, M.D., Department of Clinical Cancer Prevention, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, 1515 Holcombe Blvd., Box 236, Houston, TX 770304095 (e-mail: slippman{at}mdanderson.org).
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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Stage I lung cancer (T12N0) constitutes 10%20% of all non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cases. The 5-year survival rates following surgical treatment of stage I disease are 67% for pathologic stage T1N0 NSCLC and 57% for stage T2N0 (24). These poor survival rates are due primarily to recurrences and second primary tumors (SPTs); SPT rates in this setting have been reported to be between 2% and 3% per year (5,6).
These bleak incidence and mortality data for lung cancer and its associated SPTs have led to intensive efforts to develop new strategies for controlling this disease, including chemoprevention. A major focus of lung cancer chemoprevention is the prevention of SPTs in early-stage disease (7). The retinoids, which regulate the growth and differentiation of normal bronchial epithelial cells (8), are a class of agents that have shown promise for lung cancer prevention.
Preclinical, epidemiologic, and early clinical studies in head and neck and lung carcinogenesis (720) provided the rationale for studying the efficacy of retinoids in lung cancer prevention. Squamous metaplasia occurs in the lungs of smokers, and the early findings of Wolbach and Howe (13) paved the way for later preclinical studies (8,9,14,15) showing that vitamin A treatment could reverse the squamous metaplasia that developed in vitamin A-deficient rodents. Other experimental animal models subsequently indicated that retinoids have cancer preventive effects in other organ systems (9,14,15).
Supported by the preclinical data, the primary rationale for our present study of the retinoid isotretinoin (13-cis-retinoic acid) came from rigorously controlled trial data showing that retinoids statistically significantly reversed oral premalignancy and prevented SPTs associated with head and neck cancer (1619). We suspected that these findings for head and neck cancer would be relevant to lung cancer in part because both types of cancer are caused by tobacco smoke carcinogens (21,22). Indeed, another trial had suggested that tobacco-related SPTs associated with lung cancer were reduced by the natural retinoid retinyl palmitate (20). On the basis of these preliminary data and the known risk of SPTs in patients with early-stage head and neck or lung cancer (7,23), we launched separate large-scale, National Cancer Institute (NCI) Intergroup phase III placebo-controlled trials to investigate the efficacy of isotretinoin in preventing SPTs associated with T12N0 head and neck cancer and T12N0 NSCLC. Here we report the primary results of the lung cancer trial.
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SUBJECTS AND METHODS |
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Patient Eligibility
To be eligible for participation in the trial, patients had to meet the following requirements: have had complete resection of a histologically proven squamous, adenocarcinoma, large-cell, or bronchioalveolar NSCLC between 6 weeks and 3 years before study entry; be currently free of disease; have a postoperative diagnosis of stage I (T12N0) NSCLC; have no previous or current chemotherapy or radiotherapy; be at least 18 years of age; and provide signed institutional review board-approved informed consent forms indicating awareness of the investigational nature of this study. Eligible patients were also required to have adequate bone marrow function (defined by a white blood cell count of 3000/mm3 and a platelet count of
100 000/mm3), hepatic function (defined by a total bilirubin level of
1.5 mg/dL, alanine aminotransferase of
56 IU/L, or aspartate aminotransferase of
40 IU/L, or by values considered to be normal by the participating institution), and a fasting triglyceride level of less than or equal to 320 mg/dL. Patients were required to have a life expectancy of at least 12 months and a Zubrod performance status of 0, 1, or 2 (24).
Women of childbearing potential were not eligible for this trial before July 19, 1995. Effective July 19, 1995, the study protocol was amended to allow women of childbearing potential to register for the trial if they received counseling about the potential teratogenic effects of isotretinoin, including oral and written warnings of the hazards of taking isotretinoin during pregnancy and of the possibility and risk of contraception failure. Eligibility for such women also required written acknowledgment of the understanding of these warnings, the agreement to practice some form of contraception during the study, and a negative serum pregnancy test within 2 weeks of study entry.
Patients were not eligible for the trial if they had taken vitamin A supplements at doses of greater than 25 000 IU/day or -carotene supplements at doses of greater than 30 mg/day within 3 months of study entry. Patients were also not eligible if they had had any other cancer(s) concurrently with stage I NSCLC or any other non-NSCLC, except localized nonmelanoma skin cancer, within 5 years of study entry. Finally, patients with metastatic disease (even if resectable) or a history of more than one primary lung tumor, including synchronous lesions, at any time were also not eligible.
Study Design and Treatment Plan
Potentially eligible patients had to complete a comprehensive pretreatment evaluation within 4 weeks of potential registration to determine eligibility. This evaluation included a complete physical examination and medical history (including details of tobacco and alcohol use, Zubrod performance status, recent weight loss, and concurrent nonmalignant disease), laboratory studies (complete blood cell count, platelet count, SMA-12 chemistry profile, and fasting triglyceride level), and chest posterioranterior (PA) and lateral radiographs. Women of childbearing potential also had to complete a serum pregnancy test within 2 weeks of study entry.
Before randomization, there was an 8-week placebo run-in period, after which each patient was evaluated for compliance and disease status. Only those patients who had taken at least 75% of the prescribed number of capsules (by an actual capsule count) and who remained disease free were eligible for randomization.
Patients were randomly assigned to receive either isotretinoin or a placebo to be taken orally once a day for 3 years. Isotretinoin and the placebo were manufactured as matched soft-gel capsules by Hoffmann-La Roche Inc. (Nutley, NJ) and were distributed by the Drug Management and Authorization Section, NCI. At randomization, patients were stratified by tumor histology (squamous versus nonsquamous), stage [T1 versus T2, by use of the tumornodemetastasis staging system (2)], and smoking status at registration. These stratification factors were selected because of their potential independent impact on the major study endpoints. Current smokers were defined as active smokers and those who had stopped smoking less than 1 year before registration; former smokers were defined as those who had not smoked for 1 or more years; and never smokers were defined as those who smoked 100 or fewer cigarettes ever. The treatment allocation was done via a randomized permuted block (size = 4) within strata to balance patient factors.
Periodic study evaluations, which included a standardized patient history and physical examination, were conducted at randomization, at 3 months, at 6 months, and then every 6 months for the remainder of the study. Periodic laboratory tests included a complete blood cell count (every 6 months for the first 3 years and annually thereafter) and SMA-12 and triglyceride evaluations (at 3 months and then every 6 months for 3 years; after 3 years, only SMA-12 evaluation continued annually). Chest PA and lateral radiographs were obtained every 6 months or more frequently if clinically indicated. Protocol compliance was measured by capsule count at each clinic visit. Telephone interviews by the study nurse or data manager to encourage adherence and retention were scheduled for 9, 15, 21, 27, and 33 months after randomization.
The following four different isotretinoin dose levels, from the initial dose to three different modifications based on toxicity, were used: 0 (30 mg/day), -1 (20 mg/day), -2 (10 mg/day), and -3 (10 mg every other day). With the exception of hypertriglyceridemia, toxicity was graded by use of the Common Toxicity Criteria (NCI) (http://ctep.info.nih.gov/CTC3/default.htm). If a patient had a toxic effect of grade 2, 3, or 4, treatment was suspended and the specific toxicity was reassessed weekly via telephone or clinic visit until it subsided to grade 0 or 1. At that point, isotretinoin treatment was restarted at the next lower dose level. If the patient was taking isotretinoin at less than 30 mg/day and had a grade 0 or 1 toxicity for 3 consecutive months, the dose was increased to the next higher level. No patient received more than 30 mg/day of isotretinoin. Triglyceride toxicity was graded as follows: grade 1 toxicity was defined as more than 2.5 times but less than or equal to five times the normal level; grade 2 toxicity was defined as more than five times but less than or equal to 10 times the normal level; and grade 3 toxicity was defined as more than 10 times the normal triglyceride level or if a patient experienced complications (e.g., pancreatitis) at any grade of triglyceride toxicity. At their physician's discretion, patients with grade 2 or 3 triglyceride toxicity were either treated with a lipid-lowering medication (e.g., gemfibrozil) or taken off the study capsules. If taken off the study capsules, patients were rechecked after 1 month; if they had a toxicity grade of 0 or 1, treatment was resumed at the next lower dose level.
The primary study endpoint was the development of SPTs. All cancer events were verified histologically and classified as either an SPT or a recurrence. The Endpoint Review Committee (from MDACC CCOP and MDACC) used the following guidelines to provide consistency in determining which cancer events were lung SPTs. New lung lesions were considered to be SPTs if they met at least one of the following criteria: having a different histology from the primary tumor, occurring in a different lobe than the primary tumor, occurring in the contralateral lung, or occurring more than 5 years after the primary tumor. Recurrence was a secondary endpoint, and patients who developed recurrences that were successfully treated by surgery (with or without radiotherapy or chemotherapy) could continue on the study capsules. All endpoints were reviewed and confirmed formally by the Endpoint Review Committee, whose members were blinded to treatment assignments and side-effect results.
Statistical Analyses
We initially sought to accrue 1260 patients to enter the run-in period, of whom 1134 would be randomly assigned to one of the study arms (this latter figure accounts for a 10% assumed loss to randomization during the run-in period). These goals were later revised after our discovery, in December 1994, of an error in the randomization program that had resulted in the nonrandom assignment of 107 patients to the isotretinoin arm of the study. This error was discovered during a quality-control check involving unblinded verification of drug assignments and confirmation of errors by the statistician and programmer who wrote the randomization program. The randomization program performed a balance check for the small accruing centers (with an expected accrual of fewer than 12 patients each) as a group and for each of the large accruing centers (with an expected accrual of 12 or more patients each). This approach had several advantages, such as facilitating efficient drug distribution and balancing the two study arms. Large centers kept a drug supply on site, whereas small centers received drug only at the times of patient registrations (avoiding shelf wastage). Each patient who registered at a large accruing center was randomly assigned consecutively within his or her center's group, whereas patients registered at small accruing centers were pooled and then randomized from the communal pool. This pooling allowed the study-arm assignments of patients from small accrual centers to be balanced with respect to the three stratification factors. The 107 patients affected by the randomization error were consecutively registered patients from the small accrual centers. Although the random assignment of these patients had, in fact, been correct, a subsequent program error at the data-management center conveyed the wrong electronic instructions to the drug-distribution center to ship isotretinoin to the approximately one half of those 107 patients who should have received placebo.
It was decided by the NCI Intergroup Steering Committee, with the approval of the Data Monitoring Committee (DMC) and the NCI program director, to exclude the 107 affected patients from the final analyses and to accrue 107 additional patients. The revised accrual goals were, therefore, 1379 patients at run-in and 1241 at randomization. Under the assumptions indicated below, 1241 randomly assigned patients would permit the detection of a 50% reduction in the incidence rate of SPTs with at least 80% power and a 5% level for the two-sided test of statistical significance. The 50% reduction in SPT incidence was based on our earlier head and neck cancer trial, in which a higher dose of isotretinoin resulted in an 80% reduction in SPT incidence rate (17). The present study was designed as a 7-year trial with a uniform 4-year accrual. The sample size calculations used the method and computer program of Lachin and Foulkes (25) and incorporated the interim analysis proposed by Geller and Pocock (26) and O'Brien and Fleming (27).
We assumed an annual SPT rate of 3%, a 5-year survival rate of 60%, and a 2% annual loss to follow-up. In addition, we assumed that no patients on placebo would start taking isotretinoin (i.e., drop-in) because it must be prescribed by a health professional. Drop-out rates after randomization were predicted to be 10% on the basis of data from randomized prevention trials of isotretinoin in head and neck carcinogenesis (1618).
The primary endpoint was time to SPT. The statistical analyses were based on the intent-to-treat method. All patients randomly assigned to a treatment were included in the comparison, regardless of how much of or how long they took their assigned treatment, and were grouped by the assigned treatment. Patients who were either lost to follow-up or died without an SPT were included in the time-to-event analysis with a censored status on the last day of contact. The primary hypothesis of treatment effect was tested by use of the Cox proportional hazards model, with the stratification factors included as covariates. KaplanMeier curves were generated to estimate the probability of no event at any given time for the time-to-event data. Both the Cox model and the log-rank test were applied in the analyses of censored data.
Interim reports with summary statistics were prepared every 6 months during the 7-year study and included patient accrual information, clinical data quality and control issues, compliance rate, and frequency and severity of toxic effects and adverse drug reactions. The Intergroup Steering Committee (from participating groups, including MDACC CCOP, MDACC, cooperative groups, and the NCI) met annually for the first 5 years of the study to monitor these issues.
The first and second formal interim analyses and the final analysis were planned for 3, 5, and 7 years, respectively, after the first patient was randomly assigned to treatment. The criteria used for early termination of the trial were P values of less than .0005 and less than .014 (two-sided test) for the first and second formal interim analyses, respectively. These P values were selected according to the criteria proposed by Geller and Pocock (26) and O'Brien and Fleming (27) to preserve an overall statistical significance level of .05 for the study. The significance level was .045 when the final analysis was performed.
The prespecified secondary endpoints of the study included time-to-recurrence and overall survival. A post hoc analysis on the basis of the data suggested that there might be a treatment-by-smoking interaction. A small simulation study was conducted to evaluate the statistical power for testing this interaction. The secondary endpoint, post hoc, and subset analyses were performed by use of a two-sided statistical test with a 5% significance level. However, because of the multiple testing problem, these findings need to be interpreted with care.
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RESULTS |
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Table 1 lists the patient characteristics overall and by treatment arm. The study population had a median age of 65 years and was predominantly male (57%) and white (92%). The two arms were well balanced with respect to these demographic characteristics and the three stratification factors (histology, tumor stage, and smoking status). Among the overall study population, the most frequently found categories with respect to the three stratification factors were as follows: 68% had tumors with nonsquamous histology, 54% had stage T1 lesions, and 53% were former smokers. Current and former smokers had smoked for a median of 40 years (range, 170 years). The percentages of the overall study population that used chewing tobacco or snuff and smoked pipes or cigars were 6% and 17%, respectively, and did not differ substantially by treatment arm. The first, second (median), and third quartile times between surgery and registration were 2.1, 4.5, and 11.6 months, respectively, for the placebo arm and 2.3, 5.1, and 12.5 months, respectively, for the isotretinoin arm.
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The overall event rates and KaplanMeier curves of time to SPT (the primary endpoint) and of time to recurrence and mortality (the major secondary endpoints), by treatment and by stratification factor, are presented in Table 2 and Figs. 24
, respectively. The results of the univariate and multivariate analyses by use of the Cox proportional hazards model are presented in Tables 3 and 4
, respectively. These analyses revealed that there were no statistically significant differences between the isotretinoin and placebo arms with regard to SPTs, recurrences, or mortality as measured by event rates, KaplanMeier estimates, or univariate or multivariate hazard ratios (HRs). No treatment-effect differences in the primary or major secondary endpoints occurred among the patients recruited from the different cooperative groups (data not shown).
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We examined the treatment effects within the stratification-factor subsets (Figs. 3 and 4). Only smoking status interacted with treatment in affecting any major clinical endpoints. The survival curves based on KaplanMeier analysis (Fig. 4
) indicate that current smokers in the isotretinoin arm had statistically nonsignificantly higher rates of recurrence (P = .15, log-rank test) and statistically significantly higher rates of mortality (P = .01) than current smokers in the placebo arm, whereas never smokers in the isotretinoin arm had lower rates of recurrence (P = .12) and mortality (P = .14) than never smokers in the placebo arm, although the differences were not statistically significant. Although the treatment-related benefits in recurrence and mortality in never smokers were greater in magnitude than the adverse effects in current smokers, the benefits were not statistically significant because of the smaller numbers of never smokers (Fig. 4
). Mortality in current smokers was the only statistically significant subset finding. Overall, there were 123 deaths among current smokers; 73 occurred in the isotretinoin arm, and 50 occurred in the placebo arm. Most of these 123 deaths were cancer related. The proportions of non-cancer-related deaths among current smokers in the isotretinoin and placebo arms were 32% and 26%, respectively (P = .51). Although we examined the pattern of these non-cancer-related deaths, it was difficult to meaningfully interpret this pattern because the prespecified mortality endpoints of this study did not include any disease or condition other than SPT or recurrence. Moreover, secondary subset analyses (noncancer deaths) within another subset (current smokers) involve small numbers of patients and are, therefore, likely to produce results that are chance occurrences.
The multivariate analyses that evaluated the effects of treatment with regard to the three stratification factors indicated that isotretinoin had no effect on SPTs, recurrences, or mortality (P = .66, P = .94, and P = .56, respectively; data not shown). However, further examination of the data suggested that there might be a treatment-by-smoking interaction with respect to recurrence and mortality. The results of the multivariate analyses incorporating treatment, the three stratification factors, and the treatment-by-smoking-status interaction are presented in Table 4. These analyses showed that the HR for SPT was not associated with a treatment effect, with any of the three stratification factors, or with a treatment-by-smoking interaction. By contrast, the HR for recurrence was statistically significantly associated with tumor stage (HR of T2 versus T1 = 1.77; 95% CI = 1.35 to 2.31) and with treatment-by-smoking interaction (HR of treatment-by-current-versus-never-smoking = 3.11; 95% CI = 1.00 to 9.71). The HR for mortality was statistically significantly associated with tumor stage (HR of T2 versus T1 = 1.39; 95% CI = 1.10 to 1.77), histology (HR of squamous versus nonsquamous = 1.31; 95% CI = 1.03 to 1.68), and with treatment-by-smoking interaction (HR of treatment-by-current-versus-never-smoking = 4.39; 95% CI = 1.11 to 17.29). The multivariate analysis of treatment-by-current-versus-never-smoking involved statistically significant differential treatment effects with respect to recurrence and mortality: harmful in current smokers and beneficial in never smokers. We found no effects of treatment-by-histology or treatment-by-tumor-stage interactions on the major endpoints. The P values for assessments of treatment-by-tumor-stage effects on SPTs, recurrences, and mortality were P = .77, P = .29, and P = .73, respectively, and for assessments of treatment-by-histology effects were P = .37, P = .50, and P = .37, respectively.
To facilitate the interpretation of the study outcome, a small simulation study was carried out, and the statistical power for testing the treatment-by-smoking interaction was evaluated. On the basis of the data, we assumed that the overall survival time follows a Weibull distribution and that the censoring time follows a uniform distribution. Parameters were chosen to match the survival distribution and censoring rate in the data. With 1000 simulation trials, we had 61.3% power to detect the treatment-by-smoking interaction with a two-sided 5% type I error rate.
We also assessed the patterns of failure in our patients to better understand the natural history of stage I NSCLC. In the placebo arm only, the annual rate of SPTs was 3.9% (95% CI = 3.1% to 4.9%) and of recurrence was 6.2% (95% CI = 5.2% to 7.5%) (Table 2). Overall, recurrences were more frequent than SPTs (totals of 221 and 147, respectively), and recurrences had a threefold to fourfold greater impact on mortality than did SPTs (165 recurrence deaths versus 47 SPT deaths). The different incidence and mortality patterns of recurrence and SPT were seen even in patients with the earliest disease stage (T1); among these patients, there were 94 cases of and 76 deaths from recurrences and 74 cases of and 23 deaths from SPTs.
We also analyzed smoking-related SPTs, which were a prespecified secondary endpoint. Of the 147 total SPTs, 62% overall (47 in the isotretinoin arm versus 44 in the placebo arm) were considered to be smoking related because they developed in the lung, head and neck, esophagus, or bladder, all common sites of tobacco-related carcinogenesis. In the multivariate Cox proportional hazard model, smoking-related SPT development was not statistically significantly associated with current smoking (HR = 3.90; 95% CI = 0.52 to 29.02) or former smoking (HR = 3.09; 95% CI = 0.42 to 22.87), although the HRs were greater than 1.0. Moreover, there was no statistically significant association between smoking-related SPT development and treatment or tumor stage or a treatment-by-smoking interaction. Smoking-related SPT development was statistically significantly associated with squamous histology (HR = 1.54; 95% CI = 1.01 to 2.35; P = .047). The most common non-smoking-related SPTsgastrointestinal (15 cases), prostate (14), and breast (13) tumorsoccurred at similar frequencies in the two arms of the study.
Statistically significant treatment-related toxic effects included cheilitis (P<.001), skin dryness (P<.001), conjunctivitis (P<.001), and arthralgia (P = .047) (Table 5). Elevated triglyceride levels also were found more frequently in the isotretinoin arm than in the placebo arm, but the difference was not statistically significant. The 3-, 6-, 12-, and 18-month noncompliance rates (documented by capsule count that <75% of the capsules were taken) in the placebo arm were 4.3%, 8.4%, 15.0%, and 21.5%, respectively. This rate stabilized at about 25% after 24 months. The 3-, 6-, 12-, 24-, and 36-month noncompliance rates in the isotretinoin arm were 8.4%, 16.3%, 24.4%, 34.3%, and 39.8%, respectively. Noncompliance in the isotretinoin arm was related to increased toxicity.
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DISCUSSION |
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Our overall (in isotretinoin plus placebo patients) secondary univariate analyses involving the three stratification factors (tumor stage, histology, and smoking status) showed that stage T2 was associated with increased recurrence and increased mortality, squamous histology was associated with increased mortality, and current or former smoking (versus never smoking) was associated with increased mortality. In multivariate analyses, there were no interactions between treatment and either tumor stage or histology. However, these analyses suggested that there were statistically significant interactions between treatment and smoking status: Mortality and recurrence were increased in current smokers but were decreased in never smokers in the isotretinoin arm (versus in the placebo arm). The (unadjusted) KaplanMeier estimates also suggested that mortality (statistically significantly) and recurrence (not statistically significantly) were increased in current smokers in the isotretinoin arm and that mortality and recurrence were decreased (not statistically significantly) in never smokers in the isotretinoin arm (versus in the placebo arm). A provocative statistically nonsignificant beneficial trend in recurrence and mortality occurred with longer follow-up in the former smokers (the overall largest subgroup) in the isotretinoin arm (see Fig. 4). The results of our post hoc analyses of a smokingisotretinoin interaction and the other secondary/subset findings need to be interpreted with care because they are susceptible to chance occurrence (32). As with the other two stratification factors, smoking status was selected because of its likely independent effects on the major clinical endpoints, not because of any anticipated interaction with treatment. There was no smokingisotretinoin interactive effect on SPT development, which is an important finding that relates to the purely preventive primary hypothesis of our trial.
Our assessments of smoking status in the placebo arm (Table 2) provide important preliminary data on the independent effects of this stratification factor in stage I NSCLC patients. The average annual SPT, recurrence, and mortality rates in patients on placebo were consistently, but not statistically significantly, lower in current smokers than in former smokers. The lowest SPT rate occurred in never smokers on placebo. These data must be interpreted cautiously, however, because of their subset nature and the relatively short 3.5-year median follow-up. We plan longer follow-up studies to help clarify the associations between smoking status and clinical outcomes of patients with early-stage NSCLC.
The clinical study of isotretinoin and other retinoids is decades old. Retinoids are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in several malignant and nonmalignant disease settings. These agents have also produced promising preclinical and clinical data in a number of other settings, including cancer prevention and therapy and treatment of other serious diseases, such as diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, and emphysema (912,28,3346). Isotretinoin and other retinoids have well-established short- and long-term toxicity profiles (1012,28,29), neither of which includes interactions with smoking. The limited clinical data on smokingretinoid interactions come from the European Study on Chemoprevention With Vitamin A and N-Acetylcysteine (EUROSCAN), a large phase III trial that tested the efficacy of retinyl palmitate and N-acetylcysteine in preventing tobacco-related SPTs associated with both lung and head and neck cancer (47). The EUROSCAN trial included open-label drug distribution and a 2 x 2 factorial design and enrolled approximately 250 patients with NSCLC in each arm. The rates of overall, event-free, and tobacco-related SPT-free survival associated with retinyl palmitate in the EUROSCAN trial were not lower in never smokers (6% of the trial population) than they were in current and former smokers combined. The EUROSCAN smoking analyses did not distinguish the results of current versus former smokers or of lung cancer patients versus head and neck cancer patients. The major differences in study design, lung cancer population (stage, prior therapy, histology), form of retinoid tested, and other aspects make it difficult, if not impossible, to directly compare the EUROSCAN trial with our trial.
Two small, short-term, randomized, placebo-controlled studies in lung premalignancy have produced additional results concerning smoking status and retinoid treatment. A trial of isotretinoin in bronchial metaplasia (48) found differential treatment trends by smoking status. Active smokers on isotretinoin had slightly worse metaplasia outcomes than did active smokers on placebo, whereas patients who had recently quit smoking had slightly better metaplasia outcomes on isotretinoin than recent quitters on placebo. A trial of fenretinide, which has both retinoic acid receptor (RAR)-dependent and -independent effects (49), found no effect of treatment on bronchial metaplasia in active smokers (50).
Two previous large-scale randomized, controlled trials of -carotene or
-carotene plus vitamin A in the prevention of primary lung cancer found adverse effects in smokers. The primary analyses of both trials found that lung cancer incidence and mortality increased in current smokers in the treatment arms (51,52). Results from in vitro and animal studies (5359) have elucidated a biologically plausible mechanism for the interaction between smoking and
-carotene. An animal study (58) showed that the combination of
-carotene and smoking is associated with suppression of the RAR-
and overexpression of the transcription factor AP-1 in the lung. In contrast, isotretinoin increases RAR-
expression, which frequently is suppressed by tobacco-related carcinogenesis of the lung and head and neck (6062).
However, it is important to note two substantial differences between our results with isotretinoin and these earlier findings with -carotene with respect to smoking. First, the effects of
-carotene on the primary endpoint, lung cancer incidence, are definitive, whereas the effects of isotretinoin on secondary endpoints within subsets in our study are uncertain. Second,
-carotene was shown to increase development of new cancers, whereas our findings revealed no adverse smokingtreatment interaction involving new cancers (SPTs).
Earlier evidence suggested that retinoids are beneficial in treating oral premalignancy and in preventing SPTs associated with head and neck cancer. However, despite these findings and the common etiology of tobacco-induced field carcinogenesis shared by cancers of the lung and head and neck, the two types of cancer appear to differ substantially in their biology, particularly in their responses to retinoids. Retinoic acid treatment inhibits growth and suppresses AP-1 expression in cell lines derived from head and neck cancer but not in those derived from lung cancer (6366). Isotretinoin increases RAR- expression to a far greater extent in head and neck carcinogenesis than it does in lung carcinogenesis (60,61). Whereas the vast majority of head and neck cancers are squamous cell cancers, only approximately 30% of NSCLCs are of squamous histology. These cancers also show opposite patterns of SPTs and recurrence: Relatively more recurrences occur in T12 N0 NSCLC, and relatively more SPTs occur in T12 N0 head and neck cancer (67). Finally, the results of randomized clinical trials of retinoids, including trials of isotretinoin, have been positive in suppressing head and neck (oral) premalignancy (1619,68,69) but negative in suppressing lung premalignancy (48,50,70). The differences between lung and head and neck carcinogenesis also are reflected in a recent DMC review of our ongoing phase III SPT-prevention trial of isotretinoin in head and neck cancer patients. On the basis of the present lung study's secondary smoking data, the head and neck trial DMC examined unblinded data of that trial and opted to continue it.
The molecular mechanisms of retinoid actions in lung carcinogenesis are very complex and not well understood. Consequently, it is not clear why isotretinoin failed to prevent premalignant epithelial cells from developing into NSCLC-associated SPTs. Previous studies (61,62) have shown that isotretinoin treatment leads to a modest increase in the expression of RAR- in the lungs of smokers who do not have lung cancer. Although this finding indicates that the bronchial lung epithelium of smokers may retain some ability to respond to retinoid signaling, this ability is far less than that of oral premalignant lesions (60). It is, therefore, possible that the lack of isotretinoin activity in preventing SPTs in our trial was due to defects in the genes that are regulated by retinoic acid via RAR-
. This theory is supported by a study using an in vitro model of human lung carcinogenesis that showed that premalignant cells exhibit a decreased response to growth inhibition by retinoic acid compared with normal lung cells, despite having normal RAR-
expression (71). Alternatively, it is possible that the systemic delivery of isotretinoin in our present study did not enable sufficiently high concentrations of retinoic acid to reach the lung tissue. In this regard, recent animal studies have found that the direct administration of isotretinoin by inhalation increased expression of RARs (72) and had chemopreventive activity (73).
The mechanism responsible for the overall resistance of NSCLC recurrence to isotretinoin is also unclear. One possible mechanism for this resistance may be related to defective retinoid signaling, as manifested by the resistance to the growth-inhibitory effects of retinoic acid (63,64,66,71,74,75) that is exhibited by most cell lines derived from NSCLC. This resistance to growth inhibition may be related to the suppression of RAR- expression in the lung, which has been shown in vitro (7578) and in vivo (61,62,79). The possible causes of this RAR-
suppression (8083) include the loss of heterozygosity of the 3p24 RAR-
locus (80), the silencing of the RAR-
gene by methylation of its p2 promoter (81), and the aberrant retinoid signaling despite the presence of other retinoid receptors (71). However, it is also possible that other nuclear retinoid receptors are suppressed in the lung (79,84). Also, there may be defects downstream of nuclear receptors that block retinoid activity (85). Abnormalities in the balance of the orphan receptors COUP and Nur77 (86) or co-factors essential for retinoid signaling (87,88) could also explain aberrant retinoid signaling in NSCLC.
We can offer only tentative molecular explanations to account for our secondary findings that isotretinoin had a strong differential effect on lung cancer recurrence in the different smoking status groups. Several findings have suggested potential adverse interactions of retinoic acid with tobacco smoke that could mediate lung cancer recurrence. Tobacco carcinogens can suppress RAR- expression (89). In human esophageal cancer, RAR-
expression is selectively lost during carcinogenic progression in vivo (90) and is related to retinoid activity in vitro (91). Therefore, the recent in vitro finding that RAR-
expression is lost in human esophageal cancer cells exposed to the tobacco carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide (89) may relate to the adverse interaction that we observed between smoking and isotretinoin. Tobacco carcinogens can induce retinoic acid metabolism [e.g., by cytochrome P450 enzymes (92,93)] and DNA methylation (81,93). Retinoic acid and smoking can increase gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) expression (94), and smoking can increase GRP receptor expression (95). Finally, the tobacco carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene and retinoic acid can induce NF-
B activation (96,97). These smoking-related genetic and epigenetic changes are more prevalent in the lungs of active smokers than in the lungs of former smokers, which may help explain the difference in recurrence between these two subgroups. The possible persistence of these changes in the lungs of former smokers may help to explain the difference in recurrence between former and never smokers. We plan further analyses to determine if the duration of smoking cessation affected the recurrence rate in the treatment arm.
Large-scale, randomized, controlled trials provide valuable information in addition to answering their major endpoint questions. Our trial has provided the most definitive prospective data available to date on the natural history of pathologic stage I NSCLC. Two surprising findings involved our secondary endpoint of recurrence. First, recurrence was a substantially greater problem with respect to incidence and mortality impact than our primary endpoint of SPT prevention, even in the earliest stage pathologic T1N0 NSCLC patients. This finding confirmed the earlier preliminary combined-arm data of our trial reported in 1998 (98). Second, we found a provocative isotretinoinsmoking interaction, which requires further basic study. We also plan to study the molecular differences between the SPTs and recurrences (99) in our patients with respect to this treatmentsmoking interaction.
Cancer chemoprevention has matured tremendously over the past few years (100102). The positive effects of tamoxifen in breast cancer prevention and celecoxib in controlling familial adenomatous polyposis generated the first approvals by the FDA of cancer chemopreventive agents and led to the discovery of novel molecular targets/models for studies of cancer prevention (100113). Equally important data are provided when the field definitively tests promising agents that do not prove their hypotheses (100) because this ultimately saves limited resources by refocusing research efforts and provides physicians, patients, and the public with hard facts about what cannot reduce cancer risk in specific settings. Paralleling decades of lung cancer therapy survival-outcome results, the disappointing results of all of the completed randomized prevention trials in this site indicate that lung cancer prevention is possibly cancer chemoprevention's most difficult challenge. Although no completed randomized chemoprevention trial has shown a benefit in active smokers, the present secondary findings of a potential benefit in never and former smokers support future chemoprevention studies in this setting.
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NOTES |
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Supported in part by Public Health Service grants CA45809 and CA16672 from the NCI, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services; and by the Tobacco Settlement Funds as appropriated by the Texas State Legislature. S. M. Lippman holds the Margaret and Ben Love Professorship in Clinical Cancer Care. W. K. Hong is an American Cancer Society Clinical Research Professor and holds the Charles A. LeMaistre Distinguished Chair in Thoracic Oncology.
We thank Kendall Morse for his editorial assistance. We also thank Nora Tu, Joel Dubin, Chi-hong Tseng, Lei Feng, Feng Zhan, Beverly Shirkey, and Rebecca Fueger for their statistical and data-management assistance over the many years of this trial.
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Manuscript received October 6, 2000; revised February 13, 2001; accepted February 23, 2001.
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