
pmid: 21824893
Complementary and alternative medicines are used by up to 48% of lung cancer patients but have seen little formal assessment of survival efficacy. In this 10-year retrospective survival study, the authors investigated Pan-Asian medicine + vitamins (PAM+V) therapy in a consecutive case series of all non-small-cell lung cancer patients (n = 239) presenting at a San Francisco Bay Area Chinese medicine center (Pine Street Clinic). They compared short-term treatment lasting the duration of chemotherapy/radiotherapy with long-term therapy continuing beyond conventional therapy. They also compared PAM+V plus conventional therapy with conventional therapy alone, using concurrent controls from the Kaiser Permanente Northern California and California Cancer Registries. They adjusted for confounding with Kaplan-Meier, Cox regression, and newer methods – propensity score and marginal structural models (MSMs), which when analyzing data from observational studies or clinical practice records can provide results comparable with randomized trials. Long-term use of PAM+V beyond completion of chemotherapy reduced stage IIIB deaths by 83% and stage IV by 72% compared with short-term use only for the duration of chemotherapy. Long-term PAM+V combined with conventional therapy reduced stage IIIA deaths by 46%, stage IIIB by 62%, and stage IV by 69% compared with conventional therapy alone. Survival rates for stage IV patients treated with PAM+V were 82% at 1 year, 68% at 2 years, and 14% at 5 years. PAM+V combined with conventional therapy improved survival in stages IIIA, IIIB, and IV, compared with conventional therapy alone. Prospective trials using PAM+V with conventional therapy for lung cancer patients are justified.
Male, Lung Neoplasms, Herbal Medicine, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Vitamins, Middle Aged, Combined Modality Therapy, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung, Humans, Female, Prospective Studies, Medicine, Chinese Traditional, Propensity Score, Aged, Drugs, Chinese Herbal, Follow-Up Studies, Neoplasm Staging, Proportional Hazards Models, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Retrospective Studies
Male, Lung Neoplasms, Herbal Medicine, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Vitamins, Middle Aged, Combined Modality Therapy, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung, Humans, Female, Prospective Studies, Medicine, Chinese Traditional, Propensity Score, Aged, Drugs, Chinese Herbal, Follow-Up Studies, Neoplasm Staging, Proportional Hazards Models, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Retrospective Studies
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