| Literature DB >> 30885538 |
Paul W Sperduto1, Penny Fang2, Jing Li2, William Breen3, Paul D Brown3, Daniel Cagney4, Ayal Aizer4, James Yu5, Veronica Chiang5, Supriya Jain6, Laurie E Gaspar6, Sten Myrehaug7, Arjun Sahgal7, Steve Braunstein8, Penny Sneed8, Brent Cameron9, Albert Attia9, Jason Molitoris10, Cheng-Chia Wu11, Tony J C Wang11, Natalie Lockney12, Kathryn Beal12, Jessica Parkhurst13, John M Buatti13, Ryan Shanley14, Emil Lou14, Daniel D Tandberg15, John P Kirkpatrick15, Diana Shi16, Helen A Shih16, Michael Chuong17, Hirotake Saito18, Hidefumi Aoyama18, Laura Masucci19, David Roberge19, Minesh P Mehta17.
Abstract
The literature describing the prognosis of patients with gastrointestinal (GI) cancers and brain metastases (BM) is sparse. Our group previously published a prognostic index, the Graded Prognostic Assessment (GPA) for GI cancer patients with BM, based on 209 patients diagnosed from 1985-2005. The purpose of this analysis is to identify prognostic factors for GI cancer patients with newly diagnosed BM in a larger contemporary cohort. A multi-institutional retrospective IRB-approved database of 792 GI cancer patients with new BM diagnosed from 1/1/2006 to 12/31/2016 was created. Demographic data, clinical parameters, and treatment were correlated with survival and time from primary diagnosis to BM (TPDBM). Kaplan-Meier median survival (MS) estimates were calculated and compared with log-rank tests. The MS from time of first treatment for BM for the prior and current cohorts were 5 and 8 months, respectively (P < 0.001). Eight prognostic factors (age, stage, primary site, resection of primary tumor, Karnofsky Performance Status (KPS), extracranial metastases, number of BM and Hgb were found to be significant for survival, in contrast to only one (KPS) in the prior cohort. In this cohort, the most common primary sites were rectum (24%) and esophagus (23%). Median TPDBM was 22 months. Notably, 37% (267/716) presented with poor prognosis (GPA 0-1.0). Although little improvement in overall survival in this cohort has been achieved in recent decades, survival varies widely and multiple new prognostic factors were identified. Future work will translate these factors into a prognostic index to facilitate clinical decision-making and stratification of future clinical trials.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30885538 PMCID: PMC6527460 DOI: 10.1016/j.trsl.2019.02.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Res ISSN: 1878-1810 Impact factor: 7.012