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Treatment Patterns and Outcomes of Patients With Advanced Pleural Mesothelioma at an Academic Referral Centre

Authors :
Byoung Chun John Cho
Maisha Chowdhury
Adrian G. Sacher
Devalben Patel
Marc de Perrot
Kristen Dietrich
Fatemeh Zaeimi
Luna Zhan
Geoffrey Liu
Frances A. Shepherd
K. Khan
Penelope A. Bradbury
Natasha B. Leighl
Laura Donahoe
Michael A. Herman
Ronald Feld
S. Schmid
Source :
Clinical Lung Cancer. 23:e43-e53
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Background Overall survival (OS) for malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) in vulnerable subgroups remains poorly understood with scarce data available to guide treatment decisions. The study describes real-world detailed treatment patterns and outcomes of patients with advanced MPM overall and specifically in elderly and poor performance status (PS) patients. Methods Retrospective chart review was performed for all patients with histologically confirmed MPM seen at University Health Network/Princess Margaret Cancer Centre (UHN-PM). Results A total of 667 patients with MPM were identified and 304 advanced-disease MPM (aMPM) patients had continuing care at U HN- P M (UP-cohort). In the UP-cohort, 77% of patients received ≥ one line of systemic treatment. Systemic therapy trial participation was 39%. Patients not treated with systemic therapy (29%) were more likely to be ≥ 75 years and PS ≥ 2. Median OS was 15.3 months (95%CI 13.6-18.3), with longer survival in treated vs. untreated patients (17.4 vs. 10.6 months; P = .01). Longer survival with systemic treatment was seen in patients ≥75 years (12.7 vs. 6.6 months) and patients with poor PS (9.1 vs. 5.9 months). Median progression-free-survival (PFS) and OS for patients treated with second-line therapy was poor (3.0 and 8.9 months, respectively). Discussion In our real-world analysis of patients with aMPM treated at an academic referral centre, systemic treatment was given to the majority of patients and benefit was seen even in the elderly and poor PS patients frequently underrepresented in clinical trials. Trial participation was potentially facilitated by the formation of a dedicated multidisciplinary MPM clinic.

Details

ISSN :
15257304
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Lung Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c3fbc5b279c2b427b016ffae67bbefbe