Susan E. O'Reilly
University of British Columbia
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Cancer | 2007
Stephen Chia; Caroline Speers; Yulia D'yachkova; Anna Kang; Suzanne Malfair‐Taylor; Jeff Barnett; Andy Coldman; Karen A. Gelmon; Susan E. O'Reilly; Ivo A. Olivotto
Over the past decade, a number of new therapeutic agents have become available in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer (MBC). This study characterized the use and assessed the impact on survival of population‐based access to new agents for the treatment of MBC.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997
Joseph M. Connors; Paul Klimo; Grenfell Adams; Bruce F. Burns; Ian Cooper; Ralph M. Meyer; Susan E. O'Reilly; Joseph Pater; Ian Quirt; Anna Sadura; Chaim Shustik; Jamey Skillings; Simon Sutcliffe; Shailendra Verma; Sam Yoshida; Benny Zee
PURPOSE This randomized, prospective trial compares outcomes for patients with advanced Hodgkins disease treated with mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone (MOPP)/doxorubicin, bleomycin, and vinblastine (ABV) hybrid regimen or alternating MOPP/doxorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (ABVD). METHODS Three hundred one patients with advanced Hodgkins disease were randomized to receive MOPP/ ABV hybrid regimen or alternating MOPP/ABVD after stratification for prior treatment, B symptoms, and treatment center. Eligible patients were either previously untreated and found to have stage IIIB, IVA, or IVB disease or previously treated with wide-field irradiation. Responding patients received a minimum of eight cycles of chemotherapy. Those with residual disease in a localized region received irradiation between the sixth and seventh cycle of treatment. RESULTS Response rates to the two regimens were similar. Five-year overall survival rates were 81% and 83% for MOPP/ABV hybrid and alternating MOPP/ ABVD, respectively (P = .74; 95% confidence interval [CI] for the difference, -11% to 7%). Five-year failure-free survivals were 71% and 67% for MOPP/ABV hybrid and alternating MOPP/ABVD, respectively (P = .87; 95% CI for the difference, -9% to 17%). Significantly more episodes of febrile neutropenia and stomatitis were observed with the MOPP/ABV hybrid regimen; there was no significant difference in fatal toxicity. Patients with predefined, high-quality partial responses (PR-1s) had results similar to those with complete responses (CRs). Planned subset analysis showed no significant difference in outcome between the two arms of the trial for patients with newly diagnosed disease (5-year failure-free survival rates were 70% for MOPP/ABV hybrid and 59% for alternating MOPP/ABVD; P = .180), but superiority of alternating MOPP/ABVD for patients with prior irradiation (5-year failure-free survival 94% v 73%; P = .017). CONCLUSION MOPP/ABV hybrid and alternating MOPP/ABVD regimens are equally effective for patients with advanced Hodgkins disease.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002
Tamara Shenkier; Nicholas Voss; Randall N. Fairey; Randy D. Gascoyne; Paul Hoskins; Richard Klasa; Paul Klimo; Susan E. O'Reilly; Simon Sutcliffe; Joseph M. Connors
PURPOSE To evaluate clinical outcome of patients with limited-stage diffuse large-cell lymphoma (DLCL) treated with three cycles of chemotherapy followed by involved-region irradiation (IRRT). PATIENTS AND METHODS Adults with limited-stage DLCL were treated with brief doxorubicin-containing chemotherapy regimens between 1980 and 1998. IRRT was administered 3 to 4 weeks after the third chemotherapy treatment in a dose equivalent to 30 Gy in 10 fractions. RESULTS Three hundred and eight patients (median age, 64 years) were included, and 299 experienced complete remission. After a median follow-up of 86 months, 64 patients developed progressive disease, and 104 patients died (43 from lymphoma, three from toxicity, and 58 from other causes). Actuarial overall and progression-free survival (PFS) rates were, respectively, 80% and 81% at 5 years and 63% and 74% at 10 years. For subgroups identified using the Miller modification of the International Prognostic Index (IPI), the overall survival rates at 5 and 10 years were, respectively, 97% and 89% (no factors), 77% and 56% (one or two factors), and 58% and 48% (three or four factors), and the 5-year and 10-year PFS rates were, respectively, 94% and 89% (no factors), 79% and 73% (one or two factors), and 60% and 50% (three or four factors). Men with testicular presentation, had a definitely inferior outcome. CONCLUSION Long-term outcome with three cycles of doxorubicin-based chemotherapy and IRRT confirms that this is a successful approach for the majority of patients with limited-stage DLCL. Subgroups with worse prognoses can be identified, and these patients should be offered alternative treatment approaches.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1993
Susan E. O'Reilly; Jean M. Connors; S Howdle; Paul Hoskins; Richard Klasa; Paul Klimo; D S Stuart
PURPOSE The results of a prospective, phase II trial of an 8-week treatment program consisting of epirubicin or doxorubicin, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, etoposide, and prednisone (P/DOCE) for elderly patients with advanced large-cell lymphoma are reported and compared with previous phase II studies conducted in similar patients at the same institution. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between March 1988 and September 1991, 63 previously untreated patients aged 65 to 85 years (median, 75) with advanced-stage diffuse large-cell lymphoma, defined as Ann Arbor stage III or IV or stage I or II with B symptoms or bulky disease, were enrolled on a brief, 8-week protocol consisting of five outpatient chemotherapy treatments. RESULTS The complete response (CR) rate was 62%. The treatment-related mortality rate was 8%, the actuarial 4-year failure-free survival (FFS) rate was 41%, and the overall survival (OS) rate was 45%. These results were compared with two earlier, 12-week protocols, low-dose doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, bleomycin, and prednisone (LD-ACOB-B) and etoposide, doxorubicin, bleomycin, and prednisone (VABE), performed at the same center. There was no difference in outcome among the three regimens. If all 133 patients treated on any one of these three specially designed regimen for elderly patients are combined, the projected 5-year OS rate is 38%. CONCLUSION The 8-week P/DOCE chemotherapy regimen is equal in efficacy and similar in toxicity to 3 months of chemotherapy administered on a weekly schedule and similar to the results reported in the literature for longer, anthracycline-based chemotherapy treatments. There does not appear to be any improvement in outcome from more protracted treatment programs compared with the 8-week P/DOCE protocol.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1991
Susan E. O'Reilly; Paul Klimo; Joseph M. Connors
Elderly patients with advanced-stage diffuse large-cell lymphomas (DLCLs) are either excluded from or under-represented in most clinical trials of combination chemotherapy regimens because they tolerate treatment poorly and usually have a worse outcome. We report two brief weekly chemotherapy regimens designed specifically for elderly patients. Eligible patients were aged 65 to 85 years, had advanced-stage DLCL (diffuse mixed, diffuse large-cleaved or noncleaved, immunoblastic, or diffuse large-cell not otherwise specified). Advanced stage was defined as Ann Arbor stage III or IV or stage I or II with a mass greater than 10 cm or B symptoms. Low-dose doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, bleomycin, and prednisone (LD-ACOP-B) accrued 40 patients between March 1983 and September 1985; 65% achieved a complete response (CR), there were two toxic deaths, the actuarial failure-free survival (FFS) is 19%, disease-specific survival (DSS) 30%, and overall survival (OS) 28%, with a maximum follow-up of 6 years. The regimen of etoposide, doxorubicin, vincristine, bleomycin, and prednisone (VABE) accrued 32 patients between July 1985 and June 1987; 63% achieved a CR, there were two toxic deaths, and the actuarial FFS is 34%, DSS 45%, and OS 36%, with a maximum follow-up of 4 years. There is no difference in FFS, DSS, or OS between these two regimens. VABE caused more myelosuppression and infectious complications, although the toxic death rates were similar. We prefer LD-ACOP-B because follow-up is longer and toxicity is less.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011
Kathleen I. Pritchard; Lois E. Shepherd; Judith-Anne W. Chapman; B. Norris; Jacques Cantin; Paul E. Goss; Susan Dent; David Walde; Ted Vandenberg; Brian Findlay; Susan E. O'Reilly; Carolyn F. Wilson; Lei Han; Ettie Piura; Timothy J. Whelan; Michael Pollak
PURPOSE Somatostatin analogs act directly on breast cancer cells and indirectly on insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) levels. This trial was undertaken to assess whether octreotide would lower insulin and IGF-1 levels and reduce risk of breast cancer recurrence. PATIENTS AND METHODS The NCIC CTG MA.14 (NCIC Clinical Trials Group MA.14) trial randomly assigned postmenopausal women to 5 years of tamoxifen 20 mg daily (TAM) or TAM plus 2 years of octreotide 90 mg depot intramuscular injections monthly (TAM-OCT) as adjuvant therapy. The primary end point was event-free survival (EFS). Secondary end points were relapse-free survival (RFS), overall survival (OS), toxicity, and effects of treatment on IGF physiology. RESULTS Among 667 women with a median follow-up of 7.9 years, 220 events occurred-108 with TAM-OCT and 112 with TAM. Adjusted hazard ratios (HRs; TAM-OCT to TAM) were 0.93 for EFS (95% CI, 0.71 to 1.22; P = .62), 0.84 for RFS (95% CI, 0.59 to 1.18; P = .31), and 0.97 for OS (95% CI, 0.69 to 1.37; P = .86). Among patients with normal baseline gallbladder imaging, cholecystectomy was required in 23.0% of those receiving TAM-OCT but in only 1.4% of those receiving TAM (P < .001). At 4 months, TAM-OCT had significantly (P < .001) lowered IGF-1, IGF binding protein 3, and C-peptide levels. Older age (P = .02), tumor size (P = .001), nodal status (P = .01), high C-peptide levels (P < .001), and higher body mass index (BMI) in models excluding C-peptide (P < .001) were associated with poorer EFS in multivariate analysis. CONCLUSION Octreotide-related changes in circulating IGF-1 and C-peptide levels were statistically significant. Octreotide did not add significant clinical benefit. High C-peptide levels (surrogate for insulin secretion rate) and high BMI were associated with poor outcome.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2008
Michael Crump; Stefan Glück; Dongsheng Tu; Doug Stewart; Mark Levine; Peter Kirkbride; Janet Dancey; Susan E. O'Reilly; Tsiporah Shore; Stephen Couban; Caroline Girouard; Susan Marlin; Lois Shepherd; Kathleen I. Pritchard
PURPOSE We conducted a multicenter, randomized trial to compare progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and quality of life in women with metastatic breast cancer (MBC) receiving high-dose chemotherapy plus autologous stem-cell transplantation (ASCT; HDCT) compared with standard-dose therapy. PATIENT AND METHODS Between April 1997 and December 2000, 386 women with MBC and no prior chemotherapy for metastatic disease were registered. After initial response to anthracycline- or taxane-based induction chemotherapy, 224 patients were randomly assigned: 112 to high-dose cyclophosphamide, mitoxantrone, and carboplatin chemotherapy and ASCT (HDCT), and 112 to standard therapy (ST). Median age was 47 years (range, 25 to 67 years). Thirty two percent of women randomly assigned had estrogen and progesterone receptor-negative breast cancer, 42% had visceral metastases, and 58% had bone metastases. Complete remission rates before random assignment were 11% for those receiving HDCT and 12% for those receiving ST. RESULTS After a median follow-up of 48 months, 79 deaths were observed in the HDCT arm and 77 deaths were observed in the ST arm; seven patients (6%) in the HDCT arm died as a result of toxicity. The median OS was 24 months for the HDCT arm (95% CI, 21 to 35 months) and 28 months for ST (95% CI, 22 to 33 months; hazard ratio [HR], 0.9; 95% CI, 0.6 to 1.2; P = .43). PFS was 11 months for HDCT and 9 months for ST (HR, 0.6 in favor of HDCT; 95% CI, 0.5 to 0.9; P = .006). CONCLUSION HDCT did not improve OS in women with MBC when used as consolidation after response to induction chemotherapy.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1992
Paul Hoskins; Susan E. O'Reilly; K D Swenerton; John J. Spinelli; R N Fairey; J L Benedet
PURPOSE At the end of the 1970s it was thought that advanced epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) could be cured by multimodality treatment using surgery, cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy, and radiotherapy (RT). Such multimodality treatment was used as standard therapy at our institution. Our long-term results are reviewed. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred ninety-five previously untreated patients with stage III or IV EOC were treated between April 1979 and December 1982. All patients were to have debulking surgery, when feasible, followed by the administration of doxorubicin and cisplatin at 50 mg/m2 every 3 weeks until a total dose of doxorubicin of 450 mg/m2 had been reached. RT was used in addition in patients with disease remaining after the chemotherapy. Maintenance chemotherapy with oral cyclophosphamide and hexamethylmelamine (altretamine) was administered to patients who did not have a documented histologic complete remission. RESULTS The 10-year overall and failure-free survivals were 4% and 8%, respectively. The median overall survival was 2 years. The achievement of a histologic complete response (n = 32) did not equate to cure because 20 (63%) of the patients eventually relapsed. Multivariate analysis identified residual disease of greater or less than 2 cm as the only independent prognostic factor. CONCLUSIONS Our multimodality treatment program was noncurative for the majority of the patients. Innovative therapies are needed before we can hope to cure such disease.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997
A. Y. Y. Lee; Jean M. Connors; Paul Klimo; Susan E. O'Reilly; Randy D. Gascoyne
PURPOSE To examine the clinical course of patients who experienced a late relapse after initial curative chemotherapy for advanced-stage diffuse large-cell lymphoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between April 1981 and June 1986, 127 patients with de novo advanced-stage diffuse large-cell lymphoma were treated with a 12-week chemotherapy program (methotrexate, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisone, and bleomycin [MACOP-B]). The overall survival rate at 10 years is 52%. One hundred six patients (83%) entered a complete remission (CR) and 43 of them relapsed. With a median follow-up duration of 146 months, 26 patients relapsed early and 17 relapsed late, ie, after a continuous CR (cCR) of greater than 24 months. All late relapses occurred in patients with B-cell lymphoma. RESULTS After 24 months from diagnosis, the rate of late relapse averaged 2.2% per year and reached a projected 22% actuarial risk of late relapse after 10 years. The median time to late relapse was 69 months (range, 38 to 141). Ten patients relapsed with aggressive histologic subtypes and were treated with curative intent using anthracycline-based chemotherapy. Four remain in second CR, one is alive with disease, and five died of disease or while on treatment. The 6-year overall survival rate from the time of relapse (SFR) for these 10 patients is 42%. Six patients relapsed with low-grade follicular lymphoma. These patients received various treatments intended to control, but not necessarily cure disease. One is in second CR, one is alive with disease, and four died of disease or while on treatment. The 6-year overall SFR rate for these six patients is 40%. bcl-2 translocation and Bcl-2 protein expression at diagnosis did not predict for the type of late relapse. One patient did not undergo repeat biopsy at relapse and died 9 months later despite aggressive therapy. CONCLUSION Curative therapy should be attempted in patients who relapse late with aggressive-histology lymphoma and those who relapse with follicular histology may benefit from palliative treatment. The behavior of late-relapse lymphoma is similar to de novo lymphoma, with outcome dictated by the histologic subtype at relapse.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2002
Nicol Macpherson; Richard Klasa; Randy D. Gascoyne; Susan E. O'Reilly; Nicholas Voss; Joseph M. Connors
Elderly patients with Hodgkins lymphoma (HL) have a worse outcome than young patients. In an effort to improve the outcome in elderly HL patients, we used a 5-drug chemotherapy regimen called ODBEP (vincristine, doxorubicin, bleomycin, etoposide, prednisone) from 1986-1995. We hoped that by increasing dose intensity through delivery of treatment without delays, and increasing the number of non-cross-resistant chemotherapeutic drugs that were selected for minimal cumulative myelotoxicity, we might improve the cure rate in elderly patients with Hodgkins lymphoma. Comparison was made with a similar group of patients treated from 1981-1986 with MOPP/ABV-variant chemotherapy. Ninety-nine patients who were 65 years or older, were diagnosed with HL from 1981-1995. Seventy-one patients had advanced disease and 55 of this group were treated with curative intent using multi-agent chemotherapy (ODBEP=38; MOPP/ABV-variant=17). ODBEP and MOPP/ABV-type treatment gave a median survival of 43 and 39 months, with 5-year overall survival (OS) of 42 and 32%, respectively. There was no statistically significant difference in OS or disease specific survival between the treatments. Both treatments were well tolerated, but ODBEP was less myelotoxic. ODBEP patients had a relative risk of 0.47 of developing febrile neutropenia compared to the MOPP/ABV-variant patients. In conclusion, treatment of elderly Hodgkins lymphoma patients with ODBEP resulted in a similar OS and disease-specific survival compared to those treated with MOPP/ABV type chemotherapy, but appeared to be less toxic.