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Diversity of brain metastases screening and management in non-small cell lung cancer in Europe

Authors :
Levy, A
Faivre-Finn, C
Hasan, B
De Maio, E
Berghoff, As
Girard, N
Greillier, L
Lantuéjoul, S
O'Brien, M
Reck, M
Dingemans, Ac
Novello, S
Berghmans, T
Besse, B
Hendriks, L
Young Investigators EORTC Lung Cancer Group (YI EORTC LCG)
RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy
Pulmonologie
MUMC+: MA Med Staf Spec Longziekten (9)
Promovendi ODB
Source :
European Journal of Cancer, 93, 37-46. ELSEVIER SCI LTD, Levy, A, Faivre-Finn, C, Hasan, B, De Maio, E, Berghoff, A S, Girard, N, Greillier, L, Lantuéjoul, S, O'Brien, M, Reck, M, Dingemans, A M C, Novello, S, Berghmans, T, Besse, B, Hendriks, L & Young Investigators EORTC Lung Cancer Group (YI EORTC LCG) 2018, ' Diversity of brain metastases screening and management in non-small cell lung cancer in Europe : Results of the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Lung Cancer Group survey ', European Journal of Cancer, vol. 93, pp. 37-46 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2018.01.067
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background: Brain metastases (BM) are frequent in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, but there is a lack of evidence-based management of this patient group. We aimed to capture a snapshot of routine BM management in Europe to identify relevant research questions for future clinical trials. Methods: An EORTC Lung Cancer Group (LCG) online survey containing questions on NSCLC BM screening and treatment was distributed between 16/02/17 and 15/06/17 to worldwide EORTC LCG members, and through several European scientific societies in the thoracic oncology field. Results: A total of 462 European physician responses (394 institutions) were analysed (radiation oncologist: 53% [n = 247], pulmonologist: 26% [n = 119], medical oncologist: 18% [n = 84]; 84% with >5 years' experience in NSCLC). Italy (18%, n = 85), Netherlands (15%, n = 68), UK (14%, n = 66), and France (12%, n = 55) contributed most. 393 physicians (85%) screened neurologically asymptomatic patients for BM at diagnosis (52% using magnetic resonance imaging). Most often screened patients were those with a driver mutation (MUT+; 51%, n = 234), stage III (63%, n = 289), and IV (43%, n = 199). 158 physicians (34%) used a prognostic classification to guide initial treatment decisions, and in 50%, lowest prognostic-score threshold to receive treatment differed between MUT+ and non-driver mutation (MUT-) patients. MUT+ patients with >4 BM were more likely to receive stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) compared with MUT- (27% versus. 21%; p < 0.01). Most physicians (90%) had access to SRS. After single BM surgery, 50% systematically prescribed SRS or WBRT, and 45% only in case of incomplete resection. The preferred treatment in neurologically asymptomatic treatment-naive patients diagnosed with >5 BM was systemic treatment (79%). Of all, 45%/49% physicians stated that all tyrosine kinase inhibitors and immune checkpoint blockers were discontinued (timing varied) during SRS/WBRT, respectively. Drugs most often continued during SRS/WBRT were erlotinib (44%/40%), gefitinib (39%/34%), afatinib (29%/25%), crizotinib (33%/26%) and anti-PD-(L)-1 (28%/22%). Conclusion: BM management is highly variable in Europe: screening is not uniform, prognostic classifications are not often used and MUT+ NSCLC patients generally receive more intensive local treatment. Prospective assessment of BM management in MUT+ NSCLC patients is required. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09598049
Volume :
93
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97ee836c82f87a5d5316cc5cc611b7d8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2018.01.067