Literature DB >> 30153217

Amenorrhea after lung cancer treatment.

Elizabeth J Cathcart-Rake1, Kathryn J Ruddy1, Ruchi Gupta2, Walter Kremers2, Kelly Gast3, H Irene Su4, Ann H Partridge5, Elizabeth A Stewart6, Han Liu7,8, Yanqi He7,9, Ping Yang7.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: More than 5,000 premenopausal women are diagnosed with lung cancer annually in the United States. Limited data exist regarding the risk of treatment-related amenorrhea, a surrogate for infertility and early menopause, after systemic therapies for lung cancer.
METHODS: Premenopausal women diagnosed with lung cancer under age 50 were surveyed at diagnosis and annually thereafter about their menstrual status as a part of the Mayo Clinic Epidemiology and Genetics of Lung Cancer Research Program. Types of lung cancer-directed treatments were recorded, and frequencies of self-reported menopause at each survey were calculated.
RESULTS: A cohort of 182 premenopausal women were included in this study, with average age at lung cancer diagnosis 43 years (SD 6). Among the 85 patients who received chemotherapy, 64% self-reported that they had become menopausal within a year of diagnosis. Platinum salts were universally included in these chemotherapy regimens, and the majority of these women also received taxanes within 1 year of diagnosis. Only 15% of the 94 patients who did not receive systemic therapy within 1 year of diagnosis experienced self-reported menopause. Three patients received targeted therapy alone, two of whom remained premenopausal at the final qualifying survey, completed a median of 3 years after diagnosis.
CONCLUSIONS: Chemotherapy for lung cancer patients appears to increase risk of early loss of menses in survivors.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 30153217      PMCID: PMC6389397          DOI: 10.1097/GME.0000000000001199

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Menopause        ISSN: 1072-3714            Impact factor:   2.953


  2 in total

1.  Sex Differences in Tolerability to Anti-Programmed Cell Death Protein 1 Therapy in Patients with Metastatic Melanoma and Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: Are We All Equal?

Authors:  Narjust Duma; Azzouqa Abdel-Ghani; Siddhartha Yadav; Katherine P Hoversten; Clay T Reed; Andrea N Sitek; Elizabeth Ann L Enninga; Jonas Paludo; Jesus Vera Aguilera; Konstantinos Leventakos; Yanyan Lou; Lisa A Kottschade; Haidong Dong; Aaron S Mansfield; Rami Manochakian; Alex A Adjei; Roxana S Dronca
Journal:  Oncologist       Date:  2019-04-29

2.  Maximizing quality of life remains an ultimate goal in the era of precision medicine: exemplified by lung cancer.

Authors:  Ping Yang
Journal:  Precis Clin Med       Date:  2019-03-11
  2 in total

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