Department of Urology, Geisinger, Danville, Pennsylvania.
Department of Epidemiology and Health Services Research, Geisinger, Danville, Pennsylvania.
Cancer. 2018 Dec 1;124(23):4477-4485. doi: 10.1002/cncr.31705. Epub 2018 Oct 5.
Multiple chronic conditions (MCC) are common among older patients with cancer; however, the exclusion of these patients from clinical trials has resulted in scarce knowledge concerning outcomes, resulting in variations in treatment. Superficial bladder cancer (SBC) disproportionately affects older adults, yet to the authors' knowledge few studies to date have examined whether treatment improves long-term survival. In the current study, the authors evaluated the association between treatment of SBC and 10-year mortality in medically complex older adults.
The authors identified 1800 older (aged ≥60 years) patients with SBC (American Joint Committee on Cancer stage ≤I) from 2 community-based health systems who received treatment (bladder instillation and/or transurethral resection) or observation. Cox proportional hazards regression was performed adjusting for age, sex, race, health system, stage of disease/grade, and MCC (≥2 baseline chronic conditions). Propensity score analysis using stabilized inverse probability of treatment weights was used to compare 10-year mortality in the 2 treatment groups with adjustment for covariates.
Overall, 1485 patients (82.5%) and 315 patients (17.5%) received treatment and observation, respectively. In unweighted multivariable analysis, treatment was associated with a 30% reduction in death (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 0.70; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.58-0.85 [P<.01]) and MCC with a 72% increase in death (adjusted HR, 1.72; 95% CI, 1.44-2.05 [P<.01]). Weighted analysis with adjustment (doubly robust) also demonstrated a survival benefit for treatment (adjusted HR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.52-0.84 [P<.01]).
The results of the current study demonstrated a clinically meaningful association between cancer treatment and survival benefit in older, medically complex patients with SBC, even after adjustment for medical complexity. These data provide a foundation for future work aimed at personalizing the treatment guidance of older patients with cancer with MCC.
患有癌症的老年患者常患有多种慢性疾病(MCC);然而,由于这些患者被排除在临床试验之外,导致对结果的了解甚少,从而导致治疗方法存在差异。浅表性膀胱癌(SBC)不成比例地影响老年人,但据作者所知,迄今为止很少有研究检查治疗是否能提高长期生存率。在目前的研究中,作者评估了治疗 SBC 与 10 年死亡率之间的关联,这些患者是医学上复杂的老年人。
作者从 2 个社区医疗系统中确定了 1800 名患有 SBC(美国癌症联合委员会分期≤I 期)的老年(年龄≥60 岁)患者,这些患者接受了治疗(膀胱灌注和/或经尿道切除术)或观察。使用 Cox 比例风险回归,根据年龄、性别、种族、医疗系统、疾病/分级阶段和 MCC(≥2 种基线慢性疾病)进行调整。使用稳定逆概率治疗权重进行倾向评分分析,以调整协变量后比较两组治疗患者的 10 年死亡率。
总体而言,分别有 1485 名(82.5%)和 315 名(17.5%)患者接受了治疗和观察。在未加权多变量分析中,治疗与死亡风险降低 30%相关(调整后的危险比 [HR],0.70;95%置信区间 [95%CI],0.58-0.85 [P<.01]),MCC 与死亡风险增加 72%相关(调整后的 HR,1.72;95%CI,1.44-2.05 [P<.01])。调整(双重稳健)后的加权分析也显示治疗有生存获益(调整后的 HR,0.66;95%CI,0.52-0.84 [P<.01])。
本研究的结果表明,在患有 SBC 的老年、医学上复杂的患者中,癌症治疗与生存获益之间存在临床意义的关联,即使在调整了医学复杂性之后也是如此。这些数据为旨在为患有 MCC 的老年癌症患者制定个性化治疗指导的未来工作提供了基础。