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Poor prognosis patients with inoperable locally advanced NSCLC and large tumors benefit from palliative chemoradiotherapy: A subset analysis from a randomized clinical phase III trial

Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25355
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1097/JTO.0000000000000184
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article.pdf (576.9Kb)
Publisert versjon (PDF)
Dato
2015-11-20
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Forfatter
Strøm, Hans Henrik; Bremnes, Roy M.; Sundstrøm, Stein Harald; Helbekkmo, Nina; Aasebø, Ulf
Sammendrag
Introduction: Poor prognosis patients with bulky stage III locally advanced non–small-cell lung cancer may not be offered concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CRT). Following a phase III trial concerning the effect of palliative CRT in inoperable poor prognosis patients, this analysis was performed to explore how tumor size influenced survival and health-related quality of life (HRQOL).

Methods: A total of 188 poor prognosis patients recruited in a randomized clinical trial received four courses intravenous carboplatin day 1 and oral vinorelbine day 1 and 8, at 3-week intervals. The experimental arm (N = 94) received radiotherapy with fractionation 42 Gy/15, starting at the second chemotherapy course. This subset study compares outcomes in patients with tumors larger than 7cm (N = 108) versus tumors 7 cm or smaller (N = 76).

Results: Among those with tumors larger than 7cm, the median overall survival in the chemotherapy versus CRT arm was 9.7 and 13.4 months, respectively (p = 0.001). The 1-year survival was 33% and 56%, respectively (p = 0.01). Except for a temporary decline during treatment, HRQOL was maintained in the CRT arm, regardless of tumor size. Among those who did not receive CRT, patients with tumors larger than 7cm experienced a gradual decline in the HRQOL. The CRT group had significantly more esophagitis and hospitalizations because of side effects regardless of tumor size.

Conclusion: In patients with poor prognosis and inoperable locally advanced non–small-cell lung cancer, large tumor size should not be considered a negative predictive factor. Except for performance status 2, patients with tumors larger than 7 cm apparently benefit from CRT.

Forlag
Elsevier
Sitering
Strøm HH, Bremnes RM, Sundstrøm SH, Helbekkmo N, Aasebø U. Poor prognosis patients with inoperable locally advanced NSCLC and large tumors benefit from palliative chemoradiotherapy: A subset analysis from a randomized clinical phase III trial. Journal of Thoracic Oncology. 2014;9(6):825-833
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  • Artikler, rapporter og annet (klinisk medisin) [1974]
Copyright 2014 The International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer

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