Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Short and mid-term outcomes of multimodal treatment for locally-advanced non-small cell lung cancer in elderly patients

JOURNAL OF THORACIC ONCOLOGY(2020)

Cited 5|Views24
No score
Abstract
Objective Multimodality treatments are effective for locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (LA-NSCLC) showing benefits in overall (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS), but these options are frequently denied to elderly patients. Methods The objectives of this retrospective study were: to investigate mortality, morbidity and oncological outcomes of pulmonary resection after induction therapy (IT) for NSCLC in elderly patients. We divided the cohort into two: patients < 70 years (group A) and patients ≥70 years (group B). A multivariable logistic regression was built to identify factors associated with morbidity. Results 77 patients underwent pulmonary resection after IT, 27 were aged ≥70 years. Type of chemotherapy, surgical procedures, pathological stages were comparable between the two groups, while the preoperative use of chemo-radiation therapy regimen was more frequent in group A ( p = 0.027). In-hospital mortality was similar, while the percentage of patients with complications (38% vs 48.1%, p = 0.47) and the complication rate (50% vs 77%, p = 0.01) were higher in group B, but the severity of complications was comparable. The multivariable analysis did not identify any risk factors associated with morbidity. OS at 3 years and DFS at 2 years were not different (61% vs 48.5%, p = 0.64; 61.7% vs 44%, p = 0.393). Conclusions Lung resection for LA-NSCLC after IT can be performed safely in selected elderly patients with favourable postoperative and mid-term oncological results.
More
Translated text
Key words
NSCLC multimodal treatment,Neoadjuvant therapy,Elderly,Locally-advanced NSCLC,Survival
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined