8519 Background: Up to 1/3 of LS SCLC patients are cured by chemoradiotherapy (CRT), but severe toxicity is frequent and population-based studies show that many patients do not receive standard CRT. More knowledge on how to predict who experiences side-effects or achieves long term disease control is needed. Poor nutritional status is strongly associated with inferior survival in many types of cancer including non-small cell lung cancer, but little is known about whether this is the case in LS SCLC. We investigated whether nutritional status reported by patients on the Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment Short Form (PG-SGA SF) was associated with toxicity and survival among participants in a trial comparing high dose with standard dose twice-daily TRT in LS-SCLC (NCT02041845, n=170). Methods: Patients received four courses of platinum/etoposide chemotherapy and were randomized to TRT of 60 Gy/40 fractions or 45 Gy/30 fractions. Patients completed PG-SGA SF before treatment commenced and were categorized as having low (PG-SGA SF score 0–3.9), intermediate (4.0–8.9) and high (≥9) risk of malnutrition. Toxicity was graded according to CTCAE 4.0. Median follow-up for survival was 49 months. Results: 113/170 (66.5%) patients completed PG-SGA SF at baseline. Median age was 65 years, 46.0% were men, 88.5% had PS 0-1, 87.6% stage III disease and 22.1% weight loss of >5% the three months before inclusion. Median PG-SGA SF score was 3.0, 52.2% of patients had low, 29.2% intermediate, and 18.6% high risk of malnutrition. Numerically, there were more patients with stage III, PS 1-2 and pleural fluid among those at high risk. There was no difference in mean no. of chemotherapy courses (low: 3.85, intermediate: 3.88, high: 3.90, p=0.95) or TRT completion (low: 96.6%, intermediate: 97.0%, high: 95.2%, p=1.0). There were no statistically significant differences in proportions who experienced grade 3-4 toxicity (low: 88%, intermediate: 91%, high: 86%, p=0.86), median PFS (low: 15.1 months, intermediate: 11.8 months, high: NR, p=0.23), 2-year survival (low: 68%, intermediate: 52%, high: 67%, p=0.28) or median OS (low: 38.1 months, intermediate: 25.8 months, high: NR, p=0.15). Patients with weight loss >5% did not experience more grade 3-4 toxicity (92% vs. 87%, p=0.73), had similar median PFS (24.0 vs. 15.9 months, p=0.69), 2-year survival (64.0% vs. 66.2%, p=0.84) and median OS (30.6 vs. 35.1 months, p=0.93) as those without. Conclusions: Our study suggest that LS SCLC patients tolerate and should receive concurrent chemotherapy and twice-daily TRT regardless of nutritional status and weight loss.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.