4.6 Article

Treatment patterns and survival outcomes for patients with non-small cell lung cancer in the UK in the preimmunology era: a REAL-Oncology database analysis from the I-O Optimise initiative

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-046396

Keywords

epidemiology; chemotherapy; radiation oncology; oncology; respiratory tract tumours

Funding

  1. IQVIA
  2. Bristol Myers Squibb

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A retrospective cohort study was conducted at Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust to report characteristics, treatment, and overall survival trends of NSCLC patients from 2007 to 2018. The study found that survival rates for patients diagnosed at stage I and IIIA improved over time, possibly due to increased utilization of stereotactic ablative radiation, surgery, and chemoradiation. Conversely, survival outcomes remained poor for patients diagnosed at stage IIIB-IV, despite the increasing use of systemic anticancer therapy (SACT) for NSQ, and a significant proportion of advanced-stage patients remained untreated.
Objectives To report characteristics, treatment and overall survival (OS) trends, by stage and pathology, of patients diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) at Leeds Teaching Hospital NHS Trust in 2007-2018. Design Retrospective cohort study based on electronic medical records. Setting Large NHS university hospital in Leeds. Participants 3739 adult patients diagnosed with incident NSCLC from January 2007 to August 2017, followed up until March 2018. Main outcome measures Patient characteristics at diagnosis, treatment patterns and OS. Results 34.3% of patients with NSCLC were clinically diagnosed (without pathological confirmation). Among patients with known pathology, 45.2% had non-squamous cell carcinoma (NSQ) and 33.3% had squamous cell carcinoma (SQ). The proportion of patients diagnosed at stage I increased (16.4%-27.7% in 2010-2017); those diagnosed at stage IV decreased (57.0%-39.1%). Surgery was the most common initial treatment for patients with pathologically confirmed stage I NSCLC. Use of radiotherapy alone increased over time in patients with clinically diagnosed stage I NSCLC (39.1%-60.3%); chemoradiation increased in patients with stage IIIA NSQ (21.6%-33.3%) and SQ (24.2%-31.9%). Initial treatment with systemic anticancer therapy (SACT) increased in patients with stages IIIB-IV NSQ (49.0%-67.5%); the proportion of untreated patients decreased (30.6%-15.0%). Median OS improved for patients diagnosed with stage I NSQ and SQ and stage IIIA NSQ over time. Median OS for patients with stages IIIB-IV NSQ and SQ remained stable, Conclusions OS for stage I and IIIA patients improved over time, likely due to increased use of stereotactic ablative radiation, surgery (stage I) and chemoradiation (stage IIIA). Conversely, OS outcomes remained poor for stage IIIB-IV patients despite increasing use of SACT for NSQ. Many patients with advanced-stage disease remained untreated.

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