Pentheroudakis George, Neanidis Konstantinos, Kostadima Lida, Fountzilas George, Pavlidis Nicholas
Department of Medical Oncology, Ioannina University Hospital, 45500 Ioannina, Greece.
Support Care Cancer. 2006 Aug;14(8):867-70. doi: 10.1007/s00520-006-0020-2. Epub 2006 Feb 25.
Nonsmall cell lung cancer is increasingly diagnosed at an advanced age and squamous cell carcinoma is the commonest histological type encountered in older patients. The clinical course, management, and outcome of squamous lung cancer in the elderly have not been thoroughly studied to date.
We retrospectively analyzed 236 squamous cell lung cancer patients diagnosed in two reference hospitals and compared key epidemiological, clinical, and management features between elderly (>70 years) and younger patients. Sixty-four were aged more than 70 years at diagnosis while 172 were up to 70 years of age.
There were no differences between the two groups in gender or stage distribution. No differences were observed in the nature or duration of presenting symptoms, the appearance of pleurisy, atelectasis or vascular invasion, the incidence of distant metastatic spread, or the response to combination chemotherapy. Elderly patients were less fit (performance status 2/3 30 vs 20%, p=0.03), developed hemoptysis more often (56 vs 42%, p=0.04), and presented with smaller tumor primaries (median 4 vs 8 cm, p=0.004). When metastases were present, older patients exhibited a tropism for bony (64 vs 29%, p=0.03) and rarity of brain (5 vs 14%, p=0.03) deposits. Though elderly subjects received chemotherapy (63 vs 82%, p=0.003) or radiotherapy (29 vs 48%, p=0.009) less often than their younger counterparts, they tolerated it well and achieved comparable median time to treatment failure and overall survival (median 17 vs 18 months, log-rank p=0.22). Platinum-based chemotherapy and potentially curative management were applied less often in older patients.
Older patients are less fit, develop bony but not brain metastases, receive antineoplastic treatment less often, and survive as long as younger patients. Squamous lung carcinoma may follow a more indolent clinical course in the elderly, a hypothesis worth validating by case-cohort studies and molecular profiling, with the hope to rationally individualize patient treatment.
非小细胞肺癌在高龄患者中的诊断率日益增加,鳞状细胞癌是老年患者中最常见的组织学类型。迄今为止,老年鳞状细胞肺癌的临床病程、治疗及预后尚未得到充分研究。
我们回顾性分析了两家参考医院诊断的236例鳞状细胞肺癌患者,并比较了老年(>70岁)和年轻患者之间关键的流行病学、临床及治疗特征。64例患者诊断时年龄超过70岁,172例患者年龄在70岁及以下。
两组在性别或分期分布上无差异。在症状表现的性质或持续时间、胸膜炎、肺不张或血管侵犯的表现、远处转移扩散的发生率或联合化疗的反应方面未观察到差异。老年患者身体状况较差(体能状态2/3分别为30%和20%,p = 0.03),咯血更常见(分别为56%和42%,p = 0.04),原发肿瘤较小(中位数分别为4 cm和8 cm,p = 0.004)。出现转移时,老年患者骨转移倾向(分别为64%和29%,p = 0.03),脑转移少见(分别为5%和14%,p = 0.03)。尽管老年患者接受化疗(分别为63%和82%,p = 0.003)或放疗(分别为29%和48%,p = 0.009)的频率低于年轻患者,但他们耐受性良好,治疗失败的中位时间和总生存期相当(中位数分别为17个月和18个月,对数秩检验p = 0.22)。老年患者较少应用铂类化疗和潜在的根治性治疗。
老年患者身体状况较差,发生骨转移而非脑转移,接受抗肿瘤治疗的频率较低,但生存期与年轻患者相当。老年鳞状细胞肺癌的临床病程可能更为惰性,这一假设值得通过病例队列研究和分子分析加以验证,以期合理实现患者个体化治疗。