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Excess mortality and undertreatment in elderly lung cancer patients: treatment nihilism in the modern era?

Authors :
Matthew Conron
Paul Mitchell
Jennifer Philip
Margaret Brand
Robert G Stirling
John Zalcberg
Gavin M. Wright
Jonathan Pham
David Ball
Source :
ERJ Open Research, Vol 7, Iss 2 (2021), ERJ Open Research, article-version (VoR) Version of Record
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
European Respiratory Society (ERS), 2021.

Abstract

Treatment of elderly patients with lung cancer is significantly hindered by concerns about treatment tolerability, toxicity and limited clinical trial data in the elderly; potentially giving rise to treatment nihilism amongst clinicians. This study aims to describe survival in elderly patients with lung cancer and explore potential causes for excess mortality. Patients diagnosed with lung cancer in the Victorian Lung Cancer Registry between 2011–2018 were analysed (n=3481). Patients were age-categorised and compared using Cox-regression modelling to determine mortality risk, after adjusting for confounding. Probability of being offered cancer treatments was also determined, further stratified by disease stage. The eldest patients (≥80 years old) had significantly shorter median survival compared with younger age groups (<br />Treatment strongly determines lung cancer survival, yet nihilism may threaten treatment provision and survival outcomes. Older patients in this cohort had reduced multidisciplinary presentation, less treatment (OR 0.24) and 28% increased mortality risk. https://bit.ly/2ZGotj0

Details

ISSN :
23120541
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ERJ Open Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4df5efe4fad13585ad1503a5c7fae42e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1183/23120541.00393-2020