Department of Radiation Medicine and Applied Sciences, UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center, La Jolla, California.
J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2019 May 1;17(5):432-440. doi: 10.6004/jnccn.2018.7111.
Pancreatic cancer is an aggressive disease characterized by early and relentless tumor spread, thus leading healthcare providers to consider it a "distant disease." However, local pancreatic tumor progression can lead to substantial morbidity. This study defines the long-term morbidity from local and nonlocal disease progression in a large population-based cohort.
A total of 21,500 Medicare beneficiaries diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2000 through 2011 were identified. Hospitalizations were attributed to complications of either local disease (eg, biliary disorder, upper gastrointestinal ulcer/bleed, pain, pancreas-related, radiation toxicity) or nonlocal/distant disease (eg, thromboembolic events, cytopenia, dehydration, nausea/vomiting/motility problem, malnutrition and cachexia, ascites, pathologic fracture, and chemotherapy-related toxicity). Competing risk analyses were used to identify predictors of hospitalization.
Of the total cohort, 9,347 patients (43.5%) were hospitalized for a local complication and 13,101 patients (60.9%) for a nonlocal complication. After adjusting for the competing risk of death, the 12-month cumulative incidence of hospitalization from local complications was highest in patients with unresectable disease (53.1%), followed by resectable (39.5%) and metastatic disease (33.7%) at diagnosis. For nonlocal complications, the 12-month cumulative incidence was highest in patients with metastatic disease (57.0%), followed by unresectable (56.8%) and resectable disease (42.8%) at diagnosis. Multivariable analysis demonstrated several predictors of hospitalization for local and nonlocal complications, including age, race/ethnicity, location of residence, disease stage, tumor size, and diagnosis year. Radiation and chemotherapy had minimal impact on the risk of hospitalization.
Despite the widely known predilection of nonlocal/distant disease spread in pancreatic cancer, local tumor progression also leads to substantial morbidity and frequent hospitalization.
胰腺癌是一种侵袭性疾病,其特征为早期且持续不断的肿瘤扩散,这使得医疗保健提供者将其视为“远处转移疾病”。然而,局部胰腺肿瘤的进展可导致严重的发病率。本研究在一个大型基于人群的队列中定义了局部和非局部疾病进展的长期发病率。
共确定了 2000 年至 2011 年间被诊断患有胰腺癌的 21500 名医疗保险受益人。住院的原因是局部疾病(例如,胆道疾病、上消化道溃疡/出血、疼痛、胰腺相关、放射性毒性)或非局部/远处疾病(例如,血栓栓塞事件、细胞减少症、脱水、恶心/呕吐/运动障碍、营养不良和恶病质、腹水、病理性骨折和化疗相关毒性)的并发症。采用竞争风险分析来确定住院的预测因素。
在总队列中,9347 名患者(43.5%)因局部并发症住院,13101 名患者(60.9%)因非局部并发症住院。在调整死亡的竞争风险后,不可切除疾病患者的 12 个月局部并发症住院累积发生率最高(53.1%),其次是可切除(39.5%)和转移性疾病(33.7%)在诊断时。对于非局部并发症,诊断时转移性疾病患者的 12 个月累积发生率最高(57.0%),其次是不可切除疾病(56.8%)和可切除疾病(42.8%)。多变量分析显示,局部和非局部并发症住院的预测因素包括年龄、种族/民族、居住地、疾病分期、肿瘤大小和诊断年份。放疗和化疗对住院风险的影响很小。
尽管众所周知,非局部/远处疾病扩散在胰腺癌中更为普遍,但局部肿瘤进展也会导致严重的发病率和频繁的住院治疗。