Literature DB >> 11804692

Multiple primary malignancies involving lung cancer-clinical characteristics and prognosis.

Yung Yang Liu1, Yuh Min Chen, Sang Hue Yen, Chun Ming Tsai, Reury Perng Perng.   

Abstract

The incidence of multiple primary malignancies has increased in recent decades. The present study attempts to determine the clinical characteristics, the smoking factor, prognosis and temporal relationship of lung cancer to other cancers in patients with multiple primary malignancies. A total of 193 patients with multiple primary cancers involving lung cancer were found among 22,405 cancer cases diagnosed in Taipei Veterans General Hospital, between 1993 and 1997. Patients' clinical characteristics, smoking habit, tumor location, lung cancer histology, staging and survival were recorded and analyzed. The results showed that smoking is a significant risk factor for the development of multiple primary malignancies involving lung cancer (P<0.001). Of the 193 patients in this study, 51 had lung cancer diagnosed before the occurrence of other primary cancers (lung cancer first group, LCF group) and the remaining 142 patients had another cancer site develop ahead of the lung cancer (other cancer first group, OCF group). There was a significant difference between the time of the diagnosis of the first primary cancer to that of the second primary cancer in the LCF group and in the OCF group (median 10 vs. 46 months, P<0.001). For lung cancer staging, 53.3% of LCF patients suffered from stage I-II lung cancer, while 24.5% of OCF patients suffered from stage I-II lung cancer. Upper aerodigestive tract tumors were the most frequent tumors accompanying lung cancer, followed by colorectal and cervical cancer. Patients with cervical cancer were at a higher risk of developing lung cancer. Median survival was 65 months in the LCF patients and 81 months in the OCF patients, when calculated from the diagnosis of the first cancer (P=0.558). Median survival was 36 and 14 months, respectively, when calculated from the diagnosis of the second cancer (P=0.081). Median survival (37 vs. 14 months, P=0.085) and 3-year survival (62.5 vs. 25.4%, P=0.002), calculated from the diagnosis of the second primary lung cancer, was better in those LCF patients who developed another primary lung cancer than in the OCF patients who developed a second primary lung cancer. In conclusion, smoking is a risk factor for the development of multiple primary cancers. Upper aerodigestive tract cancer, colorectal cancer and cervical cancer were the tumors most frequently accompanying lung cancer. The staging status and median survival of patients who had a second primary lung cancer were better than in the general lung cancer population. Careful follow-up and intensive treatment is suggested for these patients.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11804692     DOI: 10.1016/s0169-5002(01)00408-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lung Cancer        ISSN: 0169-5002            Impact factor:   5.705


  34 in total

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2.  Effect of prior cancer on outcomes in advanced lung cancer: implications for clinical trial eligibility and accrual.

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3.  Previous tumour as a predictor of risk of developing lung cancer.

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4.  Characteristics of additional primary malignancies in Korean patients with non-small cell lung cancer.

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6.  Incidence and prognostic significance of second primary cancers in renal cell carcinoma.

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Review 7.  Breast Cancer and Multiple Primary Malignant Tumors: Case Report and Review of the Literature.

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8.  Risks of second primary cancer among patients with major histological types of lung cancers in both men and women.

Authors:  S-C Chuang; G Scélo; Y-C A Lee; S Friis; E Pukkala; D H Brewster; K Hemminki; E Tracey; E Weiderpass; S Tamaro; V Pompe-Kirn; E V Kliewer; K-S Chia; J M Tonita; C Martos; J G Jonasson; P Boffetta; P Brennan; M Hashibe
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9.  Multiple primary malignancies involving colorectal cancer--clinical characteristics and prognosis with reference to surveillance.

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10.  Double primary malignancy in colorectal cancer patients--MSI is the useful marker for predicting double primary tumors.

Authors:  H R Yun; L J Yi; Y K Cho; J H Park; Y B Cho; S H Yun; H C Kim; H K Chun; W Y Lee
Journal:  Int J Colorectal Dis       Date:  2008-09-17       Impact factor: 2.571

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