Abe, M., Hirashima, Y., Kasamatsu, Y., Kado, N., Komeda, S., Kuji, S., . . . Ito, K. (2015). Efficacy and safety of olanzapine combined with aprepitant, palonosetron, and dexamethasone for preventing nausea and vomiting induced by cisplatin-based chemotherapy in gynecological cancer: KCOG-G1301 phase II trial. Supportive Care in Cancer, 24, 675–682.
To investigate the effects of olanzapine as an adjunct to triplet antiemetic therapy for the prevention of chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) in patients receiving highly emetogenic chemotherapy
All patients in the trial were receiving triplet therapy in accordance with Japanese guidelines and 5 mg olanzapine one day prior to cisplatin administration then once daily on days 1–5 at bedtime. Metoclopramide was used as rescue therapy for breakthrough emesis. Patients were hospitalized during treatment.
Prospective trial
There were no grade 3 or 4 adverse events. In the overall phase (acute and delayed phases), the complete response rate was 92.5% with 97.5% in the acute phase and 95% in the delayed phase. The rate for no nausea was 87.5% in the acute phase and 67.5% in the delayed phase. The authors provided a comparison of this study's results with those of a collaborative group trial using triplet therapy. This comparison showed that the addition of olanzapine was associated with better response rates across all phases and higher rates of nausea control. The adverse effects reported were low-grade and included constipation, dry mouth, and dizziness.
The addition of olanzapine to triplet antiemetic therapy in patients receiving highly emetogenic chemotherapy was associated with high rates of complete CINV control across all phases and relatively low rates of nausea during the acute phase.
Triplet drug therapy to prevent CINV is recommended and is effective with highly emetogenic chemotherapy. However, even with this approach, the control and prevention of nausea is challenging. The findings of this study suggest the addition of olanzapine to triplet therapy may improve nausea control and overall CINV prevention with no severe adverse effects. This study has several limitations, but provides promising results. Additional, well-designed research testing the impact of olanzapine for CINV prevention is warranted.