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(Chest. 1994;106:293S-296S.)
© 1994 American College of Chest Physicians

Surgical Adjuvant Therapy for Stage II and Stage III Adenocarcinoma and Large Cell Undifferentiated Carcinoma

E. Carmack Holmes MD1

1 From the Department of Surgery/Oncology, University of California at Los Angeles

The Lung Cancer Study Group (LCSG) randomized 141 patients with resected stage II and III adenocarcinoma and large cell undifferentiated carcinoma to receive postoperative combined chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, and cisplatin (CAP) chemotherapy or bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) and levamisole immumotherapy. Careful intraoperative staging was performed on all patients. Before randomization, patients were stratified by stage, weight loss, cardiac arrhythmia, and institution. Prognostic variables such as stage, age, weight loss, and nodal involvement were equally distributed between the two groups. Disease-free survival was significantly prolonged in the group receiving chemotherapy. There was no evidence of a deleterious effect of the immunotherapy. This study indicates that postoperative CAP chemotherapy is effective in prolonging disease-free survival in these patients.







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Copyright © 1994 by the American College of Chest Physicians.