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  3. pN1 but not pN0/N2 predicts survival benefits of prophylactic cranial irradiation in small-cell lung cancer patients after surgery.
 

pN1 but not pN0/N2 predicts survival benefits of prophylactic cranial irradiation in small-cell lung cancer patients after surgery.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/157716
Date of Publication
April 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Department for BioMed...

Universitätsklinik fü...

Department for BioMed...

Contributor
Yang, Haitangorcid-logo
Department for BioMedical Research, Forschungsgruppe Thoraxchirurgie
Universitätsklinik für Thoraxchirurgie
Al-Hurani, Mohammad
Department for BioMedical Research (DBMR)
Department for BioMedical Research, Forschungsgruppe Thoraxchirurgie
Xu, Jianlin
Fan, Liwen
Schmid, Ralph
Universitätsklinik für Thoraxchirurgie
Department for BioMedical Research, Forschungsgruppe Thoraxchirurgie
Zhao, Heng
Yao, Feng
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Annals of translational medicine
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2305-5839
Publisher
AME Publishing Company
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.21037/atm-20-6984
PubMed ID
33987260
Uncontrolled Keywords

Small-cell lung cance...

Description
Background

Prophylactic cranial irradiation has been shown to reduce brain metastases and provide survival benefits in small-cell lung cancer (SCLC). However, its role in limited-stage SCLC patients after surgery remains unclear. Further, it is unknown whether the effect of prophylactic cranial irradiation is generalizable in these patients with different pathological nodal (N0-N2) stages, a state indicating the presence of tumor metastases.

Methods

We combined data from a single medical center and Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database. Propensity score matching analyses were performed (1:2) to evaluate the role of prophylactic cranial irradiation in SCLC patients after surgery. Cox proportional hazards regression model was used to identify predictors of survival.

Results

124 (18.7%) out of 664 surgically-treated SCLC patients received prophylactic cranial irradiation treatment. Within the entire cohort, multivariate Cox regression analysis identified dataset source, age, pathological T and N stages, adjuvant chemotherapy, resection type, and histology as independent prognostic factors for overall survival. Prophylactic cranial irradiation appeared to be associated with a better overall survival, but the difference is marginally significant (P=0.063). Further, we stratified patients based on the pathological N0-N2 stages using propensity score matching analyses, which showed that prophylactic cranial irradiation treatment was superior to non-prophylactic cranial irradiation treatment for surgically-treated SCLC patients with N1 stage only (univariate analysis: P=0.026; multivariate Cox: P=0.004), but not N0/N2 stage (univariate analysis: P=0.65 and P=0.28, respectively; multivariate Cox: P=0.99 and P=0.35, respectively).

Conclusions

Prophylactic cranial irradiation provides survival benefits for SCLC patients with pN1 after surgery but not with pathological N0/N2 stage. Our findings may provide helpful stratifications for clinical decision-making of prophylactic cranial irradiation intervention in SCLC patients.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/45709
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