Vulto Ans J C M, Lemmens Valery E P P, Louwman Marieke W J, Janssen-Heijnen Maryska L G, Poortmans Philip H P, Lybeert Marnix L M, Coebergh Jan Willem W
Dr. B. Verbeeten Institute, Tilburg, the Netherlands.
Cancer. 2006 Jun 15;106(12):2734-42. doi: 10.1002/cncr.21934.
The objective of this study was to study the influence of age and comorbidity on receiving radiotherapy (RT) in primary treatment of cancer.
In a population-based setting, the authors calculated the proportion of irradiated patients within 6 months after they received a diagnosis of lung, rectal, breast, or prostate cancer or non-Hodgkin lymphoma (n = 33,369 patients) according to age and comorbidity between 1995 and 2002. Logistic regression analysis was used to adjust for age, comorbidity, gender, and stage.
Patients with localized nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) ages 65 years to > or = 80 years or with comorbid conditions received RT alone significantly more often compared with younger patients (ages 65-79 years: odds ratio [OR], 3.4; age > or = 80: OR, 12.0) and patients without comorbidities (1 comorbid condition: OR, 2.1; > or = 2 comorbid conditions: OR, 2.4). This also applied to patients with nonlocalized NSCLC ages 65 years to 79 years compared with younger patients (OR, 1.4). RT was administered significantly less often to elderly patients with resected rectal cancers (ages 65-79 years: OR, 0.7; age > or = 80 years: OR, 0.4), patients age > or = 80 years with breast cancer after undergoing conserving surgery (OR, 0.1), and patients age > or = 80 years with clinical T1-T3,N0,M0 prostate cancer age (OR, 0.1) compared with younger patients. Patients with breast cancer who underwent breast-conserving surgery received RT significantly less often in the presence of comorbidities (1 comorbid condition: OR, 0.6; > or = 2 comorbid conditions: OR, 0.4). Older patients with aggressive non-Hodgkin lymphoma received only RT as treatment significantly more often compared with younger patients (OR, 3.4).
Comorbidity and age did have influence over whether patients received RT, although, for most tumor types, age appeared to be a stronger predicting factor. Under treatment was observed among patients with breast cancer and rectal cancer.
本研究的目的是探讨年龄和合并症对癌症初始治疗中接受放射治疗(RT)的影响。
在一项基于人群的研究中,作者计算了1995年至2002年间,根据年龄和合并症情况,在确诊为肺癌、直肠癌、乳腺癌、前列腺癌或非霍奇金淋巴瘤(n = 33369例患者)后6个月内接受放疗患者的比例。采用逻辑回归分析对年龄、合并症、性别和分期进行校正。
65岁至≥80岁的局限性非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)患者或合并症患者单独接受放疗的比例明显高于年轻患者(65 - 79岁:比值比[OR],3.4;年龄≥80岁:OR,12.0)以及无合并症患者(1种合并症:OR,2.1;≥2种合并症:OR,2.4)。与年轻患者相比,65岁至79岁的非局限性NSCLC患者也是如此(OR,1.4)。老年直肠癌切除患者接受放疗的比例明显较低(65 - 79岁:OR,0.7;年龄≥80岁:OR,0.4),≥80岁的乳腺癌保乳手术后患者(OR,0.1),以及≥80岁的临床T1 - T3、N0、M0前列腺癌患者(OR,0.1)。与年轻患者相比,保乳手术的乳腺癌患者在合并症存在时接受放疗的比例明显较低(1种合并症:OR,0.6;≥2种合并症:OR,0.4)。与年轻患者相比,老年侵袭性非霍奇金淋巴瘤患者仅接受放疗作为治疗的比例明显更高(OR,3.4)。
合并症和年龄确实对患者是否接受放疗有影响,尽管对于大多数肿瘤类型,年龄似乎是更强的预测因素。在乳腺癌和直肠癌患者中观察到治疗不足的情况。