Trends in the Care of Locally Advanced Pancreatic Cancer in the Modern Era of Chemotherapy.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q3 ONCOLOGY Journal of Surgical Oncology Pub Date : 2024-09-30 DOI:10.1002/jso.27851
Alexander S Thomas, Parisa Tehranifar, Wooil Kwon, Nupur Shridhar, Kazuki N Sugahara, Beth A Schrope, John A Chabot, Gulam A Manji, Jeanine M Genkinger, Michael D Kluger
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Abstract

Introduction: Current guidelines for treatment for locally advanced pancreatic cancer recommend chemotherapy ± radiation, or radiation alone when multimodal therapy is contraindicated. In a subset of patients, guideline-recommended treatment (GRT) achieves sufficient response to qualify for potentially curative resection. This study evaluated trends in treatment utilization and aimed to identify barriers to GRT.

Methods: Patients with clinical T4M0 disease in the National Cancer Database from 2010 to 2017 were included. Potential predictors were assessed by relative risk regression with Poisson distribution and compared by log-link function.

Results: In total, 28 056 patients met the criteria. Among 17 059 (67.67%) patients treated primarily with chemotherapy, 41.19% also had radiation and 8.89% went onto resection. Many received no cancer-directed treatment or failed to receive GRT. Another 710 patients had radiation (±surgery) without chemotherapy despite few contraindications to chemotherapy. Over time, patients were more likely to undergo resection after chemotherapy (aRR = 1.58; p < 0.0001) and less likely to have chemoradiation (aRR = 0.78; p < 0.0001) or go untreated (aRR = 0.90; p < 0.0001). Socioeconomic factors (race, education, income, and insurance status) affected the likelihood of receiving chemotherapy and surgery. Median overall survival (OS) was significantly improved for patients treated with chemotherapy and particularly in those patients who went on to receive RT or undergo surgical resection. OS was also longer for patients treated at high-volume academic centers. Patients insured by Medicaid, Medicare, or those without insurance had worse OS.

Conclusions: Despite improvement over time, many patients go untreated. Clinical factors were influential, but the impact of vulnerable social standing suggests persistent inequity in access to care.

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现代化疗时代局部晚期胰腺癌的治疗趋势。
导言:目前治疗局部晚期胰腺癌的指南推荐化疗+放疗,或在多模式疗法禁忌时仅采用放疗。在一部分患者中,指南推荐的治疗(GRT)可获得足够的反应,从而有资格进行潜在的根治性切除。本研究评估了治疗利用率的趋势,并旨在确定GRT的障碍:纳入了2010年至2017年国家癌症数据库中患有临床T4M0疾病的患者。通过泊松分布相对风险回归评估潜在预测因素,并通过对数链接函数进行比较:共有 28 056 名患者符合标准。在17 059名(67.67%)主要接受化疗的患者中,41.19%的患者还接受了放疗,8.89%的患者接受了切除术。许多患者没有接受癌症导向治疗或未能接受 GRT 治疗。另有 710 名患者在没有化疗的情况下接受了放疗(±手术),尽管他们很少有化疗禁忌症。随着时间的推移,患者更有可能在化疗后接受切除术(aRR = 1.58;p 结论:随着时间的推移,患者更有可能在化疗后接受切除术:尽管随着时间的推移情况有所改善,但仍有许多患者未得到治疗。临床因素有一定的影响,但弱势社会地位的影响表明,在获得治疗方面仍存在不公平现象。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
4.00%
发文量
367
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Surgical Oncology offers peer-reviewed, original papers in the field of surgical oncology and broadly related surgical sciences, including reports on experimental and laboratory studies. As an international journal, the editors encourage participation from leading surgeons around the world. The JSO is the representative journal for the World Federation of Surgical Oncology Societies. Publishing 16 issues in 2 volumes each year, the journal accepts Research Articles, in-depth Reviews of timely interest, Letters to the Editor, and invited Editorials. Guest Editors from the JSO Editorial Board oversee multiple special Seminars issues each year. These Seminars include multifaceted Reviews on a particular topic or current issue in surgical oncology, which are invited from experts in the field.
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