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Survivorship program including long‐term toxicities and quality‐of‐life development over 10 years in a randomized trial in operable stage III non‐small‐cell lung cancer (ESPATUE).

Survivorship program including long‐term toxicities and quality‐of‐life development over 10 years in a randomized trial in operable stage III non‐small‐cell lung cancer (ESPATUE).

Authors :
Schulte, Christina
Gauler, Thomas
Pöttgen, Christoph
Friedel, Godehard
Kopp, Hans‐Georg
Fischer, Berthold
Schmidberger, Heinz
Kimmich, Martin
Budach, Wilfried
Cordes, Sebastian
Wienker, Johannes
Metzenmacher, Martin
de Los Rios, Rodrigo Hepp
Spengler, Werner
De Ruysscher, Dirk
Belka, Claus
Welter, Stefan
Luetke‐Brintrup, Diana
Guberina, Maja
Oezkan, Filiz
Source :
International Journal of Cancer; Jan2025, Vol. 156 Issue 1, p154-163, 10p
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Over 40% stage‐III non‐small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients (pts) experience 5‐year survival following multimodality treatment. Nevertheless, little is known about relevant late toxicities and quality‐of‐life (QoL) in the further long‐term follow‐up. Therefore, we invited pts from our randomized phase‐III trial (Eberhardt et al., Journal of Clinical Oncology 2015) after 10 years from diagnosis to participate within a structured survivorship program (SSP) including follow‐up imaging, laboratory parameters, cardio‐pulmonary investigations, long‐term toxicity evaluations and QoL questionnaires. Of 246 pts initially accrued, 161 were considered potentially resectable following the induction therapy and were randomized (80 to arm A: definitive chemoradiation; 81 to arm B: definitive surgery; 85 not randomized for different reasons; group C). 31 from 37 pts still alive after 10 years agreed to the SSP (13 in A; 12 in B; 6 in C). Clinically relevant long‐term toxicities (grade 3 and 4) were rarely observed with no signal favoring any of the randomization arms. Furthermore, available data from the global QoL analysis did not show a signal favoring any definitive locoregional approach (Mean QoL in SSP A pts: 56.41/100, B pts: 64.39/100) and no late decline in comparison to baseline and early 1‐year follow‐up. This is the first comprehensive SSP of very late survival follow‐up reported in stage‐III NSCLC treated within a randomized multimodality trial and it may serve as important baseline information for physicians and pts deciding for a locoregional treatment option. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00207136
Volume :
156
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
International Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
180681392
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ijc.35131