Glycemic control in diabetic patients improved overall lung cancer survival across diverse populations

Background The consequence of diabetes on lung cancer overall survival (OS) is debated. This retrospective study used 2 large lung cancer databases to assess comprehensively diabetes effects on lung cancer OS in diverse demographic populations, including health disparity. Methods The University of T...

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Veröffentlicht in:JNCI cancer spectrum 2024-09, Vol.8 (5)
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Wayne Y, Luke, Brian, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Lee, J Jack, Yi, Yong, Okpechi, Samuel C, Gause, Barry, Mehta, Paras, Sherman, Steven I, Ochoa, Augusto, Dmitrovsky, Ethan, Liu, Xi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background The consequence of diabetes on lung cancer overall survival (OS) is debated. This retrospective study used 2 large lung cancer databases to assess comprehensively diabetes effects on lung cancer OS in diverse demographic populations, including health disparity. Methods The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center database (32 643 lung cancer patients with 11 973 patients with diabetes) was extracted from electronic health records (EHRs) using natural language processing (NLP). Associations were between diabetes and lung cancer prognostic features (age, sex, race, body mass index [BMI], insurance status, smoking, stage, and histopathology). Hemoglobin A1C (HgbA1c) and glucose levels assessed glycemic control. Validation was with a Louisiana cohort (17 768 lung cancer patients with 5402 patients with diabetes) enriched for health disparity cases. Kaplan-Meier analysis, log-rank test, multivariable Cox proportional hazard models, and survival tree analyses were employed. Results Lung cancer patients with diabetes exhibited marginally elevated OS or no statistically significant difference versus nondiabetic patients. When examining OS for 2 glycemic levels (HgbA1c > 7.0 or glucose > 154 mg/dL vs HgbA1c > 9.0 or glucose > 215 mg/dL), a statistically significant improvement in OS occurred in lung cancer patients with controlled versus uncontrolled glycemia (P < .0001). This improvement spanned sex, age, smoking status, insurance status, stage, race, BMI, histopathology, and therapy. Survival tree analysis revealed that obese and morbidly obese patients with controlled glycemia had higher lung cancer OS than comparison groups. Conclusion These findings indicate a need for optimal glycemic control to improve lung cancer OS in diverse populations with diabetes.
ISSN:2515-5091
2515-5091
DOI:10.1093/jncics/pkae081