# Turtle Study: A Phase 2 Study of Durvalumab Plus Carboplatin and Etoposide in Elderly Patients With Extensive-Stage SCLC (LOGiK 2003)

**Authors:** Hidenobu Ishii, Koichi Azuma, Yuta Yamanaka, Hiroshige Yoshioka, Yukihiro Toi, Naoki Shingu, Katsuhiko Naoki, Masaki Okamoto, Yuko Tsuchiya-Kawano, Taishi Harada, Hiroyuki Inoue, Hiroshi Ishii, Kazunori Tobino, Chiho Nakashima, Yoshifusa Koreeda, Yasushi Hisamatsu, Shinsuke Tsumura, Takashi Inagaki, Keiko Mizuno, Takayuki Shimose, Isamu Okamoto

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jtocrr.2025.100836 · 2025-04-21

## TL;DR

This study tested a treatment combining durvalumab with chemotherapy in elderly patients with extensive-stage small cell lung cancer and found it to be safe and effective.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the safety and efficacy of durvalumab plus carboplatin and etoposide in elderly patients with extensive-stage SCLC.

## Key findings

- Grade 3 or higher adverse events occurred in 94.6% of patients, primarily hematologic.
- The objective response rate was 89.5%, with a median progression-free survival of 5.4 months and median overall survival of 16.1 months.
- No significant decline in quality of life or functional assessment scores was observed.

## Abstract

The combination of immune checkpoint inhibitors with chemotherapy is the standard treatment for extensive-stage (ES) SCLC. However, its safety for elderly patients is not fully validated. We evaluated the safety and efficacy of durvalumab plus carboplatin and etoposide in elderly patients with ES-SCLC.

In this prospective, single-arm, multicenter, phase 2 clinical trial, patients with ES-SCLC aged above or equal to 75 years received chemotherapy with up to four cycles of durvalumab 1500 mg on day 1, carboplatin at a dose equivalent to an area under the curve of 5 on day 1, and etoposide 80 mg/m2 on days 1 to 3 every 3 weeks as induction therapy. Maintenance therapy with durvalumab 1500 mg was administered every 4 weeks until disease progression or unacceptable toxicity. The primary end point was safety, and key secondary end points were objective response rate, progression-free survival, overall survival, quality of life, and Geriatric Assessment.

Between August 2021 and February 2023, 40 patients were enrolled at 17 institutions and 38 were assessable for safety and efficacy. Grade 3 or higher adverse events occurred in 36 patients (94.6%). The most common adverse events were hematologic, including grade 3 or higher neutropenia (76.3%) and febrile neutropenia (15.8%). The objective response rate, median progression-free survival, and median overall survival were 89.5%, 5.4 months, and 16.1 months, respectively. No decrease in quality of life or functional assessment scores was observed after treatment.

Durvalumab plus carboplatin and etoposide was tolerable and expected to be effective in elderly patients with ES-SCLC.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** carboplatin (PubChem CID 426756), etoposide (PubChem CID 36462)
- **Diseases:** small cell lung cancer (MONDO:0008433)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** hematologic (MESH:D006402), toxicity (MESH:D064420), ES-SCLC (MESH:D018288), febrile neutropenia (MESH:D064147), neutropenia (MESH:D009503)
- **Chemicals:** Carboplatin (MESH:D016190), Etoposide (MESH:D005047), Durvalumab (MESH:C000613593)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12173610/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12173610