1. The Impact of Extended Delayed Surgery for Indolent Lung Cancer or Part-Solid Ground Glass Nodules
- Author
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Thomas A. D'Amico, Xiao Li, Belle K. Lin, Vignesh Raman, Nicholas R. Mayne, Chi-Fu Jeffrey Yang, Holly Elser, and Douglas Z. Liou
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Adenocarcinoma of Lung ,Adenocarcinoma ,Gastroenterology ,Interquartile range ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Lung cancer ,Pandemics ,Neoplasm Staging ,Retrospective Studies ,Lung ,business.industry ,Proportional hazards model ,Hazard ratio ,COVID-19 ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Original Article ,Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background During the COVID-19 pandemic, patients with lung cancer may experience treatment delays. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of extended treatment delays on survival among patients with stage I typical bronchopulmonary carcinoid (BC), lepidic predominant adenocarcinoma (LPA) or invasive adenocarcinoma with a lepidic component (ADL). Methods Using National Cancer Database data (2004-2015), multivariable Cox regression analysis with penalized smoothing splines was performed to examine the association between treatment delay and all-cause mortality for stage I BC, LPA, and ADL. Propensity score–matched analyses compared the overall survival of patients who received “early” vs “delayed” surgery (ie, 0-30 vs 90-120 days after diagnosis) across the different histologic subtypes. Results During the study period, patients with stage I BC (n = 4947), LPA (n = 5340), and ADL (n = 6816) underwent surgery. Cox regression analysis of these cohorts showed a gradual steady increase in the hazard ratio the longer treatment is delayed. However, in propensity score–matched analyses that created cohorts of patients who underwent early and delayed surgery that were well-balanced in patient characteristics, no significant differences in 5-year survival were found between early and delayed surgery for stage I BC (87% [95% CI:77%-93%] vs 89% [95% CI: 80%-94%]), stage I LPA (73% [95% CI: 64%-80%] vs 77% [95% CI: 68%-83%]), and stage I ADL (71% [95% CI: 64%-76%] vs 69% [95% CI: 60%-76%]). Conclusions During the COVID-19 pandemic, for early-stage indolent lung tumors and part-solid ground glass lung nodules, a delay of surgery by 3-4 months after diagnosis can be considered.
- Published
- 2022
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