Researchers conducted a small, early-stage study to see if a specific drug combination was safe to give alongside a type of radiation therapy. They tested amrubicin and cisplatin chemotherapy combined with accelerated hyperfractionated thoracic radiotherapy in nine patients who had not yet received treatment for limited-stage small cell lung cancer. The main goal was to find a safe dose, not to prove the treatment was effective.
The study found that a dose of 25 mg/m² for amrubicin was well-tolerated. All nine patients in the study showed a response to the treatment. The researchers also reported a 5-year overall survival rate of 64.8%, but noted that the median survival times had not yet been reached, meaning the long-term data is still incomplete. Some patients experienced serious side effects like severe low white blood cell counts with fever and low potassium.
It is very important to understand this was a Phase I study, which is the first step in testing a new treatment approach in people. Its main purpose is to check safety and find the right dose, not to show if the treatment is better than what is already available. The study was very small, had no comparison group, and the survival data is not yet mature. This means the results are very preliminary and should not change how patients are currently treated. More and larger studies are needed to know if this combination is truly helpful.