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Might radiation therapy in addition to chemotherapy improve overall survival of patients with non-oligometastatic Stage IV non-small cell lung cancer?: Secondary analysis of two prospective studies.

Authors :
ShengFa Su
YinXiang Hu
WeiWei Ouyang
Zhu Ma
QingSong Li
HuiQin Li
Yu Wang
XiaoHu Wang
Tao Li
JianCheng Li
Ming Chen
You Lu
YuJu Bai
ZhiXu He
Bing Lu
Source :
BMC Cancer. 11/21/2016, Vol. 18, p1-10. 10p. 3 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: The role of radiation therapy in addition to chemotherapy has not been well established in nonoligometastatic Stage IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). We aimed to investigate overall survival (OS) of nonoligometastatic Stage IV NSCLC treated with chemotherapy with concurrent radiation to the primary tumor. Methods: Eligible patients were screened from two prospective studies. Oligometastatic and non-oligometastatic NSCLC were defined as having < 5 and ≥5 metastatic lesions, respectively. Prognostic factors for OS were identified by using univariate and multivariate analysis. Landmark analysis and propensity-score matching (PSM) were each performed to further adjust for confounding. Results: A total of 274 patients were identified as the study cohort: 183 had non-oligometastatic disease. For all 274 patients, those who received a radiation dose ≥63 Gy to the primary tumor and had oligometastatic disease had better OS (P < 0.001 and P = 0.017, respectively). When patients were subdivided into those with oligometastatic or non-oligometastatic disease, a radiation dose ≥ 63 Gy remained a significant prognostic factor for better OS. For non-oligometastatic patients, multivariate analysis showed that receiving ≥63 Gy radiation, having a GTV <146 cm3, having response to chemotherapy, and having stable or increased post-treatment KPS independently predicted better OS (P = 0.018, P = 0.014, P = 0.014, and P = 0.001). After PSM in non-oligometastatic patients, a higher radiation dose (≥63 Gy) remained to be correlated with better OS. By landmark analysis, aggressive radiation (≥63 Gy) remained to be correlated with better OS in Pre-PSM cohort (P = 0.005) and Post-PSM cohort (P = 0.004). Conclusions: Radiation dose, primary tumor volume, response to chemotherapy and KPS after treatment are associated with OS in patients with non-oligometastatic disease; on basis of effective system chemotherapy, aggressive thoracic radiotherapy may prolong OS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712407
Volume :
18
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
BMC Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
120091938
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-016-2952-3