Shipe Maren E, Maiga Amelia W, Deppen Stephen A, Edwards Gretchen C, Marmor Hannah N, Pinkerman Rhonda, Smith Gary T, Lio Elizabeth, Wright Johnny L, Shah Chirayu, Nesbitt Jonathan C, Grogan Eric L
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Department of Surgery, Tennessee Valley Healthcare System, Nashville, TN, USA.
J Thorac Dis. 2021 Mar;13(3):1427-1433. doi: 10.21037/jtd-20-2102.
Lung cancer patients often have comorbidities that may impact survival. This observational cohort study examines whether coronary artery calcifications (CAC) impact all-cause mortality in patients with resected stage I non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
Veterans with stage I NSCLC who underwent resection at a single institution between 2005 and 2018 were selected from a prospectively collected database. Radiologists blinded to patient outcomes graded CAC severity (mild, moderate, or severe) in preoperative CT scans using a visual estimation scoring system. Inter-rater reliability was calculated using the kappa statistic. All-cause mortality was the primary outcome. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis and Cox proportional hazards regression were used to compare time-to-death by varying CAC.
The Veteran patients (n=195) were predominantly older (median age of 67) male (98%) smokers (96%). The majority (68%) were pathologic stage IA. Overall, 12% of patients had no CAC, 27% mild, 26% moderate, and 36% severe CAC. Median unadjusted survival was 8.8 years for patients with absent or mild CAC versus 6.3 years for moderate and 5.9 years for severe CAC (P=0.01). The adjusted hazard ratio for moderate CAC was 1.44 (95% CI, 0.85-2.46) and for severe CAC was 1.73 (95% CI, 1.03-2.88; P for trend <0.05).
The presence of severe CAC on preoperative imaging significantly impacted the all-cause survival of patients undergoing resection for stage I NSCLC. This impact on mortality should be taken into consideration by multidisciplinary teams when making treatment plans for patients with early-stage disease.
肺癌患者常伴有可能影响生存的合并症。这项观察性队列研究探讨冠状动脉钙化(CAC)是否会影响I期非小细胞肺癌(NSCLC)切除术后患者的全因死亡率。
从一个前瞻性收集的数据库中选取2005年至2018年在单一机构接受手术切除的I期NSCLC退伍军人。对患者预后不知情的放射科医生使用视觉估计评分系统对术前CT扫描中的CAC严重程度(轻度、中度或重度)进行分级。使用kappa统计量计算评分者间信度。全因死亡率是主要结局。采用Kaplan-Meier生存分析和Cox比例风险回归来比较不同CAC情况下的死亡时间。
退伍军人患者(n = 195)主要为老年男性(中位年龄67岁),男性占98%,吸烟者占96%。大多数(68%)为病理IA期。总体而言,12%的患者无CAC,27%为轻度,26%为中度,36%为重度CAC。无CAC或轻度CAC患者的中位未调整生存期为8.8年,中度CAC患者为6.3年,重度CAC患者为5.9年(P = 0.01)。中度CAC的调整后风险比为1.44(95%CI,0.85 - 2.46),重度CAC为1.73(95%CI,1.03 - 2.88;趋势P<0.05)。
术前影像学检查发现重度CAC对I期NSCLC切除术后患者的全因生存有显著影响。多学科团队在为早期疾病患者制定治疗方案时应考虑到这种对死亡率的影响。