Dexamethasone, Flurbiprofen Axetil and Long-term Survival After Lung Cancer Surgery (NCT03172988) | Clinical Trial Compass
TerminatedPhase 4
Dexamethasone, Flurbiprofen Axetil and Long-term Survival After Lung Cancer Surgery
Stopped: Protocol violation occurred frequently during the postoperative period.
China126 participantsStarted 2017-08-02
Plain-language summary
Surgical resection is the first choice treatment for patients with non-small-cell lung cancer. Despite of advances in surgical techniques, the long-term survival rate of postoperative patient is far from optimal. In a recent retrospective cohort study of the applicants, 588 patients after surgery for non-small-cell lung cancer were followed up for a medium of 5.2 years. The results showed that perioperative use of dexamethasone was associated with prolonged survival; perioperative use of flurbiprofen axetil was also associated with a slightly longer survival but not statistically significant. Further analysis showed that combined administration of dexamethasone and flurbiprofen axetil had additive effect in prolonging survival. We hypothesize that, for patients undergoing surgery for non-small-cell lung cancer, perioperative administration of dexamethasone and flurbiprofen axetil may improve long-term survival. However, evidences from randomized controlled trials are still lacking in this aspect.
Who can participate
Age range18 Years – 85 Years
SexALL
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Inclusion criteria
✓. Age from 18 to 85 years old;
✓. Diagnose as non-small-cell lung cancer (stage IA-IIIA);
✓. Plan to undergo surgical resection;
✓. Provide written informed consents.
Exclusion criteria
✕. Clinical evidences suggest remote metastasis of the primary cancer; have received radiotherapy, chemotherapy or targeted therapy before surgery; have received previous surgery for lung cancer; diagnosed with other cancer (other than lung cancer) currently or previously;
✕. History of therapy with glucocorticoids or immunosuppressants within 1 year, or therapy with non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) within 1 month;
✕. Allergy to glucocorticoids or NSAIDs;
✕. Contraindications to dexamethasone or flurbiprofen axetil, such as asthma or hives urticaria induced by aspirin or other NSAIDs; active digestive tract ulcer or bleeding, or history of repeated digestive tract ulcer or bleeding; coagulopathy (platelet count \< 50\*10\^9/L, International Normalized Ratio \> 1.4, or activated partial thromboplastin time \> 4 seconds above upper limit); current therapy with lomefloxacin, norfloxacin, or enoxacin; severe cardiac dysfunction (New York heart association class 3 or above, or Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction less than 30%) or myocardial infarction within 3 months; liver injury (transaminase higher than 2 times of upper limit); kidney injury (creatinine higher than 1.5 times of upper limit); uncontrolled severe hypertension before surgery (\> 180/120 mmHg);
What they're measuring
1
3-year survival after surgery
Timeframe: From end of surgery until 3 years after surgery.