Rades D, Hansen HC, Schild SE, Janssen S. A New Diagnosis-Specific Survival Score for Patients to be Irradiated for Brain Metastases from Non-small Cell Lung Cancer.
Lung 2019;
197:321-326. [PMID:
30927058 DOI:
10.1007/s00408-019-00223-6]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 8] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Key Words] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/31/2019] [Accepted: 03/25/2019] [Indexed: 12/21/2022]
Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Personalized treatment helps one achieve optimal outcomes in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Understanding patients' survival prognoses in a palliative situation like intracerebral metastases is critical. A new survival score, the WBRT-30-NSCLC, was developed for patients with intracerebral metastases from NSCLC.
METHODS
Eight factors were investigated in 157 patients receiving 10 × 3 Gy of whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT) including age, gender, Karnofsky performance score (KPS), interval from diagnosis of NSCLC to WBRT, pre-WBRT systemic treatment, primary tumor control, number of intracerebral metastases, and metastasis outside the brain. Factors significant (p < 0.05) or showing a trend (p < 0.08) on multivariate analysis were used for the WBRT-30-NSCLC. Patient scores were derived by adding factor scores (6-month survival rates divided by 10). WBRT-30-NSCLC was compared to other scores for intracerebral metastases from NSCLC.
RESULTS
On multivariate analysis, age (p = 0.005), KPS (p < 0.001), systemic treatment (p = 0.018), and metastasis outside the brain (p < 0.001) were significant; number of intracerebral metastases (p = 0.075) showed a trend. Four groups were designed (912, 1317, 1820, and 22 points) with 6-month survival rates of 3, 26, 65, and 100%. Positive predictive value (PPV) to predict death ≤ 6 months after WBRT was 97% (updated DS-GPA classification 86%, Rades-NSCLC 88%), and PPV to predict survival ≥ 6 months was 100% (updated DS-GPA 78%, Rades-NSCLC 74%).
CONCLUSIONS
The WBRT-30-NSCLC appeared very precise in identifying patients with intracerebral metastases from NSCLC dying ≤ 6 months or surviving ≥ 6 months. It appeared more precise than previous scores and can support physicians developing personalized treatment regimens.
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