Mortality during or shortly after curative-intent radio-(chemo-) therapy over the last decade at a large comprehensive cancer center
•Peritherapeutic mortality is linked to toxicity or tumor progression.•In this series, mortality during or after definitive oncology therapy was low.•Prevalence of peritherapeutic death was highest for HNC, GIT, CNS and NSCLC.•Patient selection employing ECOG-PS is key to further improve quality-of-...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical and translational radiation oncology 2023-07, Vol.41, p.100645-100645, Article 100645 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Peritherapeutic mortality is linked to toxicity or tumor progression.•In this series, mortality during or after definitive oncology therapy was low.•Prevalence of peritherapeutic death was highest for HNC, GIT, CNS and NSCLC.•Patient selection employing ECOG-PS is key to further improve quality-of-care.
Definitive surgical, oncological and radio-oncological treatment may result in significant morbidity and acute mortality. Mortality during or shortly after treatment in patients undergoing curative radio-(chemo)-therapy has not been studied systematically. We reviewed all curative radio-(chemo-)therapies at a large comprehensive cancer center over the last decade.
The institutional record was screened for patients who received curative-intent radio-(chemo-)therapy and deceased during or within 30 days after radiotherapy. Curative therapy was defined as prescribed dosage of EQD2 ≥ 50 Gy for radiotherapy alone and EQD2 ≥ 40 Gy for radiochemotherapies. Data on demographics, disease and treatment were assembled and assessed.
Of 15,255 radiotherapy courses delivered at our center, 8,515 (56%) were performed with curative-intent. During or within 30 days after radio-(chemo-)therapy, 78 patients died (0.9% of all curative-intent courses). Median age of the deceased patients was 70 (IQR, 62–78) years, and 36% (28/78) were female. Median pre-therapeutic ECOG-PS was 1 (IQR, 0–2) and Charlson-Comorbidity-Index was 3+ (IQR, 2–3+). The most common primary malignancies were head and neck cancer (33/78; 42%) and central nervous system tumors (13/78; 17%). Peritherapeutic mortality varied by primary tumor, with the highest prevalence observed in head and neck and gastrointestinal cancer patients with 2.9% (33/1,144) and 2.4% (8/332), respectively. Among patients with known cause of death (34/78; 44%), tumor progression (12/34; 35%) and pulmonary complications/causes (11/34; 35%) were most common. On multivariable regression analysis, a worse ECOG-PS was associated with a relatively earlier peri-radiotherapeutic death (p = 0.014).
Mortality during or within 30 days of curative-intent radio-(chemo-)therapy was low, yet highest for head and neck (2.9%) and gastrointestinal tumor (2.4%) patients. Reasons for these findings include rapid tumor progression in some cancers, good patient selection, with ECOG-PS being most useful and predictive for avoiding early mortality. Future research should help refine predictors for peri-RT mortality. |
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ISSN: | 2405-6308 2405-6308 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ctro.2023.100645 |