3.8 Article

Real-world Studies Link NSAID Use to Improved Overall Lung Cancer Survival

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CANCER RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS
卷 2, 期 7, 页码 590-601

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AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-22-0179

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资金

  1. NIH, NCI grant [R01CA190722]
  2. NCI
  3. NIH [75N91019D00024]
  4. Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation Award
  5. UT-STARs award
  6. American Cancer Society Clinical Research Professorship
  7. NIH/NCI [P30 CA51008]

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This study investigates whether NSAIDs improve overall survival in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) through real-world studies and natural language processing (NLP). The results show a statistically significant association between NSAID use and increased NSCLC survival across different stages, histopathology, gender, smoking history, and demographic groups. These findings provide a rationale for future randomized trials of NSAIDs in NSCLC.
Inflammation is a cancer hallmark. NSAIDs improve overall survival (OS) in certain cancers. Real-world studies explored here whether NSAIDs improve non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) OS. Analyses independently interrogated clinical databases from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center (MDACC cohort, 1987 to 2015; 33,162 NSCLCs and 3,033 NSAID users) and Georgetown-MedStar health system (Georgetown co-hort, 2000 to 2019; 4,497 NSCLCs and 1,993 NSAID users). Structured and unstructured clinical data were extracted from electronic health records using natural language processing (NLP). Associations were made be-tween NSAID use and NSCLC prognostic features (tobacco use, gender, race, and body mass index, BMI). NSAIDs were statistically significantly (P < 0.0001) associated with increased NSCLC survival (5-year OS 29.7% for NSAID users vs. 13.1% for nonusers) in the MDACC cohort. NSAID users gained 11.6 months over nonusers in 5-year restricted mean sur-vival time. Stratified analysis by stage, histopathology, and multicovariable assessment substantiated benefits. NSAID users were pooled independent of NSAID type and by NSAID type. Landmark analysis excluded immor-tal time bias. Survival improvements (P < 0.0001) were confirmed in the Georgetown cohort. Thus, real-world NSAID usage was independently associated with increased NSCLC survival in the MDACC and Georgetown cohorts. Findings were confirmed by landmark analyses and NSAID type. The OS benefits persisted despite tobacco use and did not depend on gen-der, race, or BMI (MDACC cohort, P < 0.0001). These real-world findings could guide future NSAID lung cancer randomized trials.Significance: NLP and real-world studies conducted in large cohorts explored whether NSAIDs improved survival across NSCLC stages, histopathology, gender, smoking history, or demographic groups. A sta-tistically significant association between NSAID use and NSCLC survival was found. This provides a rationale for future NSAID randomized NSCLC trials.

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