4.5 Article

Concurrent proton-pump inhibitors increase risk of death for lung cancer patients receiving 1st-line gefitinib treatment - a nationwide population-based study

Journal

CANCER MANAGEMENT AND RESEARCH
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages 8539-8546

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S222278

Keywords

proton pump inhibitor; epidermal growth factor receptor; non-small cell lung cancer; gefitinib; tyrosine kinase inhibitor; National Health Insurance Research Database

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Funding

  1. Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Chiayi branch, Taiwan [CORPG6D0161]

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Purpose: Concurrent proton pump inhibitor (PPI) use might reduce the plasma concentration of epidermal growth factor receptor-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (EGFR-TKIs). Clinically, the adverse effect of PPIs on patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) treated with first-line EGFR TKIs remains controversial. This study was conducted to evaluate whether the combined use of gefitinib with PPIs affected NSCLC outcomes. Patients and methods: We performed a nationwide cohort study of patients newly diagnosed with NSCLC between 1997 and 2013 using the Taiwan Cancer Registry and Taiwan National Health Insurance databases. We identified patients who were treated with first-line EGFR TKIs and analyzed the association between use of PPIs and TKI treatment outcome. We defined the coverage ratio of PPIs as duration of PPI treatment in days divided by duration of TKIs in days. Patients who exhibited an overlap of >20% between PPI and TKI usage days were defined as having a high coverage ratio. Results: A total of 1278 patients were treated with first-line gefitinib, 309 of which took PPIs at the same time and 145 had a high PPI coverage ratio. Patients had similar time to failure regardless of their PPI coverage ratio during gefitinib treatment. However, higher PPI coverage ratio significantly decreased overall survival (OS) compared with that of patients with a lower PPI coverage ratio or no PPI treatment in univariate analysis (median OS, 13.5, 16.7, and 21.8 months, respectively, p<0.01) and multivariate analyses (high coverage ratio HR: 1.67; low coverage ratio HR: 1.29). Exposure to PPIs during first line gefitinib treatment significantly decreased overall survival of patients with NSCLC. Conclusion: Concurrent use of PPIs was associated with lower overall survival in patients with EGFR-mutant NSCLC under first-line gefitinib treatment.

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