4.3 Article

Impact of sex on prognostic host factors in surgical patients with lung cancer

Journal

ANZ JOURNAL OF SURGERY
Volume 87, Issue 12, Pages 1015-1020

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ans.13728

Keywords

clinical oncology; lung neoplasms; sex; surgery; tumour staging

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Funding

  1. RACS
  2. Foundation for Research Scholarship
  3. Raelene Boyle Scholarship
  4. University of Melbourne Melville Hughes Scholarship

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BackgroundLung cancer has markedly poorer survival in men. Recognized important prognostic factors are divided into host, tumour and environmental factors. Traditional staging systems that use only tumour factors to predict prognosis are of limited accuracy. By examining sex-based patterns of disease-specific survival in non-small cell lung cancer patients, we determined the effect of sex on the prognostic value of additional host factors. MethodsTwo cohorts of patients treated surgically with curative intent between 2000 and 2009 were utilized. The primary cohort was from Melbourne, Australia, with an independent validation set from the American Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database. Univariate and multivariate analyses of validated host-related prognostic factors were performed in both cohorts to investigate the differences in survival between men and women. ResultsThe Melbourne cohort had 605 patients (61% men) and SEER cohort comprised 55681 patients (51% men). Disease-specific 5-year survival showed men had statistically significant poorer survival in both cohorts (P<0.001); Melbourne men at 53.2% compared with women at 68.3%, and SEER 53.3% men and 62.0% women were alive at 5years. Being male was independently prognostic for disease-specific mortality in the Melbourne cohort after adjustment for ethnicity, smoking history, performance status, age, pathological stage and histology (hazard ratio=1.54, 95% confidence interval: 1.10-2.16, P=0.012). ConclusionsSex differences in non-small cell lung cancer are important irrespective of age, ethnicity, smoking, performance status and tumour, node and metastasis stage. Epidemiological findings such as these should be translated into research and clinical paradigms to determine the factors that influence the survival disadvantage experienced by men.

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