Prophylactic cranial irradiation in elderly patients with small cell lung cancer: Findings from a North Central Cancer Treatment Group pooled analysis

2015 
Abstract Objectives To examine the efficacy of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) in elderly patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC) (≥70years of age) from a pooled analysis of four prospective trials. Materials & Methods One hundred fifty-five patients with SCLC (limited stage, LSCLC, and extensive stage, ESCLC) participated in four phase II or III trials. Ninety-one patients received PCI (30Gy/15 or 25Gy/10) and 64 patients did not receive PCI. Survival was compared in a landmark analysis that included only patients who had stable disease or better in response to primary therapy. Results Patients who received PCI had better survival than patients who did not receive PCI (median survival 12.0months vs. 7.6months, 3-year overall survival 13.2% vs. 3.1%, HR=0.53 [95% CI 0.36–0.78], p =0.001). On multivariate analysis of the entire cohort, the only factor that remained significant for survival was stage (ESCLC vs. LSCLC, p =0.0072). In contrast, the multivariate analysis of patients who had ESCLC revealed that PCI was the sole factor associated with a survival advantage (HR=0.47 [95% CI 0.24–0.93], p =0.03). Grade 3 or higher adverse events (AEs) were significantly greater in patients who received PCI (71.4% vs. 47.5%, p =0.0031), with non-neuro and non-heme being the specific AE categories most strongly correlated with PCI delivery. Conclusions PCI was associated with a significant improvement in survival for our entire elderly SCLC patient cohort on univariate analysis. Multivariate analysis suggested that the survival advantage remained significant in patients with ESCLC. PCI was also associated with a modest increase in grade 3 or higher AEs.
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