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Proposing synchronous oligometastatic non-small-cell lung cancer based on progression after first-line systemic therapy

Authors :
Kazushige Wakuda
Hirotsugu Kenmotsu
Keita Mori
Kazuhisa Takahashi
Taichi Miyawaki
Akifumi Notsu
Tateaki Naito
Yasuhisa Ohde
Hideyuki Harada
Haruyasu Murakami
Shota Omori
Haruki Kobayashi
Akira Ono
Nobuaki Mamesaya
Eriko Miyawaki
Masahiro Endo
Toshiaki Takahashi
Source :
Cancer Science
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Despite the importance of accurate disease definitions for effective management and treatment decisions, there is currently no consensus on what constitutes oligometastatic non–small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Predominant patterns of initial progressive disease (PD) after first‐line systemic therapy have been shown to be a substantial basis for local ablative therapy (LAT) for all disease sites in patients with oligometastatic NSCLC, suggesting that these patterns could be helpful in defining synchronous oligometastatic NSCLC. Therefore, this retrospective study aimed to propose a threshold number of metastases for synchronous oligometastatic NSCLC, based on the pattern of initial PD after first‐line systemic therapy. The cut‐off threshold number of metastases compatible with synchronous oligometastatic NSCLC was determined using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analyses of PD at the initially involved sites alone. ROC analysis of 175 patients revealed that the presence of 1‐3 metastases before first‐line treatment (sensitivity, 85.9%; specificity, 97.3%; area under the curve, 0.91) was compatible with oligometastatic NSCLC, therefore we divided patients into oligometastatic NSCLC and non‐oligometastatic NSCLC groups. Multivariate logistic regression analyses revealed oligometastatic NSCLC to be the only independent predictor of PD at initially involved sites alone (odds ratio 165.7; P<br />Patients with “synchronous oligometastatic” non–small‐cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are defined as those with few metastases, however the maximum number of metastases compatible with this diagnosis remains unclear. This study defined patients with synchronous oligometastatic NSCLC as those with 1‐3 metastases based on initial progression patterns.

Details

ISSN :
13497006
Volume :
112
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....51912a77c282eb3313ab48292ab44654