Litcius/Paper detail

Single-Dose Netupitant/Palonosetron Versus 3-day Aprepitant for Preventing Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting: A Pooled Analysis

Rudolph M. Navari, G. Binder, Erminio Bonizzoni, Rebecca Clark-Snow, Silvia Olivari, Eric Roeland

2021Future Oncology21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Aim: In the absence of comparative studies, guidelines consider neurokinin 1 receptor antagonists (RAs) as interchangeable. We evaluated the pooled efficacy from three cisplatin registration trials, each with arms containing netupitant/palonosetron (NEPA), a fixed neurokinin 1 RA (netupitant)/serotonin Type 3 (5-HT3) RA (palonosetron) combination, and an aprepitant (APR) regimen. Materials & methods: Efficacy data were pooled for rates of complete response (CR: no emesis/no rescue medication), complete protection (CR + no significant nausea), total control (CR + no nausea) and no significant nausea during acute (0–24 h), delayed (>24–120 h) and overall (0–120 h) phases post chemotherapy. Results: Among 621 NEPA and 576 APR patients, response rates were similar for the acute phase, and generally favored NEPA during delayed and overall phases. CR rates for NEPA versus APR were 88.4 versus 89.2%, 81.8 versus 76.9% (p < 0.05) and 78.4 versus 75.0% during the acute, delayed and overall phases, respectively. Conclusion: Oral NEPA administered on day 1 was more effective than a 3-day APR regimen in preventing delayed nausea and vomiting associated with cisplatin.

Topics & Concepts

PalonosetronAprepitantMedicineChemotherapy-induced nausea and vomitingNauseaVomitingNK1 receptor antagonistChemotherapyOncologyAnesthesiaInternal medicineAntiemeticReceptorSubstance PNeuropeptideNausea and vomiting managementAnesthesia and Pain ManagementSympathectomy and Hyperhidrosis Treatments