Lim Jonathan E, Chien Michael W, Earle Craig C
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Ann Surg. 2003 Jan;237(1):74-85. doi: 10.1097/00000658-200301000-00011.
To analyze prognostic factors influencing pancreatic cancer survival following curative resection, using prospectively collected, population-based data.
Several studies have analyzed the determinants of long-term survival in postresection pancreatic cancer patients, but the majority of these have been single-institutional chart reviews yielding inconsistent results.
This retrospective cohort study examined 396 Medicare-eligible patients over age 65 who were diagnosed with nonmetastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma and who underwent surgical resection with curative intent while residing in one of the 11 Survival, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) registries between January 1991 and December 1996. Linked Medicare data provided information on treatment and comorbidity, while linked census tract data supplied sociodemographic characteristics.
Median survival for the overall study population was 17.6 months, with 1- and 3-year survival rates of 60.1% and 34.3%, respectively. Survival appears to be gradually improving over time, concomitant with a rise in the proportion of patients undergoing surgery in teaching centers. Prognostic variables significantly diminishing survival on univariate analysis included African American race, treatment not in a teaching hospital, lack of adjuvant chemoradiation therapy, as well as histopathologic factors that included tumor size larger than 2 cm in diameter, moderate to poor histologic grade, and positive lymph node metastases. Higher socioeconomic status was associated both with an increased likelihood of receiving adjuvant therapy and improved overall survival. Multivariate analyses indicated the strongest predictors of survival were adjuvant combined chemoradiotherapy, small tumors (<2 cm in diameter), negative lymph nodes, well-differentiated histology, undergoing surgery in a teaching hospital, and high socioeconomic status.
Although biologic characteristics remain important predictors of survival for patients with resected pancreatic cancer, the most powerful determinant is postoperative adjuvant chemoradiation therapy. An interesting finding that warrants further investigation is the effect of socioeconomic status on both the likelihood of receiving adjuvant treatment and subsequent survival, indicating a possible relationship between the quality of care delivered and outcomes.
利用前瞻性收集的基于人群的数据,分析影响胰腺癌根治性切除术后生存的预后因素。
多项研究分析了胰腺癌切除术后患者长期生存的决定因素,但其中大多数是单机构病历回顾,结果并不一致。
这项回顾性队列研究考察了396名65岁以上符合医疗保险条件的患者,这些患者被诊断为非转移性胰腺腺癌,于1991年1月至1996年12月期间居住在11个生存、流行病学和最终结果(SEER)登记处之一时接受了根治性手术切除。关联的医疗保险数据提供了治疗和合并症信息,而关联的人口普查区数据提供了社会人口学特征。
整个研究人群的中位生存期为17.6个月,1年和3年生存率分别为60.1%和34.3%。随着时间的推移,生存率似乎在逐渐提高,同时教学中心接受手术的患者比例也在上升。单因素分析中显著降低生存率的预后变量包括非裔美国人种族、不在教学医院接受治疗、缺乏辅助放化疗,以及组织病理学因素,包括直径大于2 cm的肿瘤、中至低组织学分级和阳性淋巴结转移。较高的社会经济地位与接受辅助治疗的可能性增加和总体生存率提高相关。多因素分析表明,生存的最强预测因素是辅助放化疗联合、小肿瘤(直径<2 cm)、阴性淋巴结、高分化组织学、在教学医院接受手术以及高社会经济地位。
虽然生物学特征仍然是胰腺癌切除患者生存的重要预测因素,但最有力的决定因素是术后辅助放化疗。一个值得进一步研究的有趣发现是社会经济地位对接受辅助治疗的可能性和后续生存的影响,这表明所提供的医疗质量与预后之间可能存在关联。