Prognostic factors for limited-stage small cell lung cancer: a study of 284 patients

Jun Chen, Ruoxiang Jiang, Yolanda I Garces, Aminah Jatoi, Shawn M Stoddard, Zhifu Sun, Randolph S Marks, Yunpeng Liu, Ping Yang, Jun Chen, Ruoxiang Jiang, Yolanda I Garces, Aminah Jatoi, Shawn M Stoddard, Zhifu Sun, Randolph S Marks, Yunpeng Liu, Ping Yang

Abstract

Combined modality therapy is the standard care for limited stage-small cell lung cancer (LS-SCLC) and has led to a significant improvement in patients' survival. This study sought to investigate and define the importance of prognostic effects of known and controversial factors especially the impact of smoking status and treatment strategies. A total of 284 patients with LS-SCLC were diagnosed and prospectively followed from 1997 to 2008 at Mayo Clinic; their characteristics and survival outcome were assessed on the basis of age, gender, smoking history, performance status (PS), tumor recurrence or progression, and treatment using Cox proportional hazards models. Our main results are as follows: (1) Although neither smoking status (former or current smokers) nor intensity (pack-years smoked) at the time of SCLC diagnosis were significant survival predictors, compared to continued smokers (who never quit smoking), patients who quit at or after diagnosis cut the risk of death by 45% (HR=0.55, 95% CI 0.38-0.79); patients who quit before lung cancer diagnosis also experienced survival benefit (HR=0.72, 95% CI 0.52-1.00). (2) Thoracic radiotherapy and platinum-based chemotherapy could significantly improve survival but the timing (within or after one month of diagnosis) of starting chemotherapy or radiation therapy did not. (3) After adjusting for other known factors, a lower PS did not predict poorer survival, suggesting that PS should not be the only factor for making treatment decisions. In conclusion, this study demonstrated the negative impact of continued cigarette smoking on survival; therefore, clinicians and all care providers should strongly encourage smoking cessation at diagnosis of LS-SCLC.

Copyright 2009 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
A, survival curves by smoking cessation for patients who quit smoking at or after cancer diagnosis versus those who never quit after adjustment for age, gender, performance status, recurrence/progression, and treatment. B, survival curves by recurrence/progression for all patients after adjustment for age, gender, performance status, smoking cessation, and treatment. C, adjusted curves for time to recurrence or progression by quit smoking status for patients who quit smoking at or after cancer diagnosis versus those who never quit after adjustment for age, gender, performance status, recurrence/progression, and treatment.

Source: PubMed

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