The Dutch Lung Cancer Audit-Radiotherapy (DLCA-R): Real-World Data on Stage III Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients Treated With Curative Chemoradiation.


Journal

Clinical lung cancer
ISSN: 1938-0690
Titre abrégé: Clin Lung Cancer
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 100893225

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
03 2023
Historique:
received: 06 07 2022
revised: 23 10 2022
accepted: 16 11 2022
pubmed: 27 12 2022
medline: 25 2 2023
entrez: 26 12 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Chemoradiotherapy (CRT) is the standard of care in inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, favoring concurrent (cCRT) over sequential CRT (seqCRT), with adjuvant immunotherapy in responders. Elderly and frail NSCLC patients have generally been excluded from trials in the past. In elderly patients however, the higher treatment related morbidity of cCRT, may outweigh the possible lower tumor control of seqCRT. For elderly patients with locally advanced NSCLC real-world data is essential to be able to balance treatment toxicity and treatment outcome. The aim of this study is to analyze acute toxicity and 3-month mortality of curative chemoradiation (CRT) in patients with stage III NSCLC and to analyze whether cCRT for elderly stage III NSCLC patients is safe. The Dutch Lung Cancer Audit-Radiotherapy (DLCA-R) is a national lung cancer audit that started in 2013 for patients treated with curative intent radiotherapy. All Dutch patients treated for stage III NSCLC between 2015 and 2018 with seqCRT or cCRT for (primary or recurrent) stage III lung cancer are included in this population-based study. Information was collected on patient, tumor- and treatment characteristics and the incidence and severity of acute non-hematological toxicity (CTCAE-4 version 4.03) and mortality within 3 months after the end of radiotherapy. To evaluate the association between prognostic factors and outcome (acute toxicity and mortality within 3 months), an univariable and multivariable analysis was performed. The definition of cCRT was:radiotherapy started within 30 days after the start of chemotherapy. Out of all 20 Dutch departments of radiation oncology, 19 centers participated in the registry. A total of 2942 NSCLC stage III patients were treated with CRT. Of these 67.2% (n = 1977) were treated with cCRT (median age 66 years) and 32.8% (n = 965) were treated with seqCRT (median age 69 years). Good performance status (WHO 0-1) was scored in 88.6% for patients treated with cCRT and in 71.0% in the patients treated with seqCRT. Acute nonhematological 3-month toxicity (CTCAE grade ≥3 or radiation pneumonitis grade ≥2) was scored in 21.9% of the patients treated with cCRT and in 17.7% of the patients treated with seqCRT. The univariable analysis for acute toxicity showed significantly increased toxicity for cCRT (P = .008), WHO ≥2 (P = .006), and TNM IIIC (P = .031). The multivariable analysis for acute toxicity was significant for cCRT (P = .015), WHO ≥2 (P = .001) and TNM IIIC (P = .016). The univariable analysis for 3-month mortality showed significance for seqCRT (P = .025), WHO ≥2 (P < .001), higher cumulative radiotherapy dose (P < .001), higher gross tumor volume total (P = .020) and male patients (p < .001). None of these variables reached significance in the multivariable analysis for 3-month mortality. In this national lung cancer audit of inoperable NSCLC patients, 3-month toxicity was significantly higher in patients treated with cCRT (21.9% vs. 17.7% for seqCRT) higher TNM stage IIIC, and poor performance (WHO≥2) patients.The 3-months mortality was not significantly different for tested parameters. Age was not a risk factor for acute toxicity, nor 3 months mortality.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36572596
pii: S1525-7304(22)00266-2
doi: 10.1016/j.cllc.2022.11.008
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

130-136

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Edith Dieleman (E)

Amsterdam UMC location AMC, Radiation Oncology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Lisa van der Woude (L)

RadboudUMC, Cardiothoracic surgery, Nijmegen, The Netherlands; Dutch Institute for Clinical Auditing, Leiden, The Netherlands.

Rob van Os (R)

Amsterdam UMC location AMC, Radiation Oncology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Liselotte van Bockel (L)

Haga ziekenhuis, Radiation Oncology, Den Haag, The Netherlands.

Ida Coremans (I)

LUMC, Radiation Oncology, Leiden, The Netherlands.

Corine van Es (C)

UMCU, Radiation Oncology, Utrecht, The Netherlands.

Katrien De Jaeger (K)

Catharina Ziekenhuis, Radiation Oncology, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.

Hans Peter Knol (HP)

Noordwest Ziekenhuis groep, Radiation Oncology, Alkmaar, The Netherlands.

Willemijn Kolff (W)

Amsterdam UMC location AMC, Radiation Oncology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Frederike Koppe (F)

Instituut Verbeeten, Radiation Oncology, Tilburg, The Netherlands.

Jacqueline Pomp (J)

Medisch Spectrum Twente, Radiation Oncology, Enschede, The Netherlands.

Bart Reymen (B)

Maastro, Radiation Oncology, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Dominic Schinagl (D)

RadboudUMC, Radiation Oncology, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

Femke Spoelstra (F)

Amsterdam UMC location VUMC, Radiation Oncology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Caroline Tissing-Tan (C)

Radiotherapiegroep, Radiation Oncology, Arnhem, The Netherlands.

Noelle van der Voort van Zyp (N)

Haaglanden MC, Radiation oncology, Den Haag, The Netherlands.

Antoinet van der Wel (A)

Radiotherapeutisch Instituut Friesland, Radiation Oncology, Leeuwarden, The Netherlands.

Robin Wijsman (R)

UMCG, Radiation Oncology, Groningen, The Netherlands.

Michel Dielwart (M)

ZRTI, Radiation Oncology, Vlissingen, The Netherlands.

Erwin Wiegman (E)

Isala, Radiation Oncology, Zwolle, The Netherlands.

Ronald Damhuis (R)

Department of Research, Netherlands Comprehensive Cancer Organisation, Utrecht, The Netherlands.

Jose Belderbos (J)

Netherlands Cancer Institute, Radiation Oncology, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

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Classifications MeSH