Clinical and Genomic Characteristics of Small Cell Lung Cancer in Never Smokers: Results From a Retrospective Multicenter Cohort Study

Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) has the strongest association with smoking among lung cancers. The characteristics of never smokers with SCLC is not known. Are the clinical characteristics, prognostic factors, survival, genomic alterations, and tumor mutational burdens of SCLC in patients who have nev...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chest 2020-10, Vol.158 (4), p.1723-1733
Hauptverfasser: Thomas, Anish, Mian, Idrees, Tlemsani, Camille, Pongor, Lorinc, Takahashi, Nobuyuki, Maignan, Kathleen, Snider, Jeremy, Li, Gerald, Frampton, Garrett, Ali, Siraj, Kim, Sehyun, Nichols, Samantha, Rajapakse, Vinodh, Guha, Udayan, Sharon, Elad, Fujimoto, Junya, Moran, Cesar A, Wistuba, Ignacio I, Wei, Jun S, Khan, Javed, Szabo, Eva, Torres, Aracelis Z, Carson, Kenneth R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) has the strongest association with smoking among lung cancers. The characteristics of never smokers with SCLC is not known. Are the clinical characteristics, prognostic factors, survival, genomic alterations, and tumor mutational burdens of SCLC in patients who have never smoked different from those who have smoked? A retrospective multicenter cohort study of patients with clinician-confirmed SCLC was performed with the use of a longitudinal and nationally representative electronic medical records database. Smoking history was assessed through technology-enabled abstraction and confirmed for never smokers via chart review. Genomic characteristics of never smoker patients with SCLC were examined with the use of a next-generation sequencing-based gene panel and whole exome sequencing. One hundred of 5,632 patients (1.8%) with SCLC were never smokers. Relative to smokers, never smokers were more likely to be female (66.0% vs 52.4%; P = .009) and present with extensive stage (70.0% vs 62.2%; P = .028). Never smokers had a higher proportion of patients in age groups 35 to 49 years (7.0% vs 3.0%; P = .006) and ≥80 years (17.0% vs 8.2%; P = .006). Known risk factors for lung cancer were found in 
ISSN:0012-3692
1931-3543
DOI:10.1016/j.chest.2020.04.068