Patel Akshat M, Ali Omer, Kainthla Radhika, Rizvi Syed M, Awan Farrukh T, Patel Toral, Pan Edward, Maher Elizabeth, Desai Neil B, Timmerman Robert, Kumar Kiran A, Ramakrishnan Geethakumari Praveen
Division of Hematologic Malignancies and Stem Cell Transplantation, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas, USA.
Division of Hematology/Oncology, Parkland Health and Hospital System, Dallas, Texas, USA.
Neurooncol Pract. 2022 Jan 12;9(3):183-192. doi: 10.1093/nop/npab066. eCollection 2022 May.
This study analyzes sociodemographic barriers for primary CNS lymphoma (PCNSL) treatment and outcomes at a public safety-net hospital versus a private tertiary academic institution. We hypothesized that these barriers would lead to access disparities and poorer outcomes in the safety-net population.
We reviewed records of PCNSL patients from 2007-2020 ( = 95) at a public safety-net hospital ( = 33) and a private academic center ( = 62) staffed by the same university. Demographics, treatment patterns, and outcomes were analyzed.
Patients at the safety-net hospital were significantly younger, more commonly Black or Hispanic, and had a higher prevalence of HIV/AIDS. They were significantly less likely to receive induction chemotherapy (67% vs 86%, = .003) or consolidation autologous stem cell transplantation (0% vs. 47%, = .001), but received more whole-brain radiation therapy (35% vs 16%, = .001). Younger age and receiving any consolidation therapy were associated with improved progression-free (PFS, = .001) and overall survival (OS, = .001). Hospital location had no statistical impact on PFS ( = .725) or OS ( = .226) on an age-adjusted analysis.
Our study shows significant differences in treatment patterns for PCNSL between a public safety-net hospital and an academic cancer center. A significant survival difference was not demonstrated, which is likely multifactorial, but likely was positively impacted by the shared multidisciplinary care delivery between the institutions. As personalized therapies for PCNSL are being developed, equitable access including clinical trials should be advocated for resource-limited settings.
本研究分析了在一家公共安全网医院与一家私立三级学术机构中,原发性中枢神经系统淋巴瘤(PCNSL)治疗的社会人口学障碍及治疗结果。我们假设这些障碍会导致安全网人群在治疗机会上存在差异,且治疗结果更差。
我们回顾了2007年至2020年期间(n = 95)在一家公共安全网医院(n = 33)和同一所大学附属的一家私立学术中心(n = 62)的PCNSL患者记录。对人口统计学、治疗模式和治疗结果进行了分析。
安全网医院的患者明显更年轻,更常见的是黑人或西班牙裔,且艾滋病毒/艾滋病患病率更高。他们接受诱导化疗的可能性显著更低(67%对86%,P = .003)或巩固性自体干细胞移植的可能性显著更低(0%对47%,P = .001),但接受全脑放疗的比例更高(35%对16%,P = .001)。年龄较小和接受任何巩固治疗与无进展生存期(PFS,P = .001)和总生存期(OS,P = .001)改善相关。在年龄调整分析中,医院所在地对PFS(P = .725)或OS(P = .226)没有统计学影响。
我们的研究表明,公共安全网医院与学术癌症中心在PCNSL治疗模式上存在显著差异。未显示出显著的生存差异,这可能是多因素的,但可能受到机构间共享的多学科护理模式的积极影响。随着PCNSL个性化治疗的发展,应倡导在资源有限的环境中实现公平获取,包括临床试验。