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Pembrolizumab showed ‘promising’ antitumor activity in small-cell lung cancer

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Fri, 01/04/2019 - 13:40

 

Pembrolizumab monotherapy showed durable antitumor activity in extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer, and its safety profile resembled that in other tumor types, based on the results of the phase 1b KEYNOTE-028 study of 24 patients.

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Pembrolizumab monotherapy showed durable antitumor activity in extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer, and its safety profile resembled that in other tumor types, based on the results of the phase 1b KEYNOTE-028 study of 24 patients.

 

Pembrolizumab monotherapy showed durable antitumor activity in extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer, and its safety profile resembled that in other tumor types, based on the results of the phase 1b KEYNOTE-028 study of 24 patients.

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Key clinical point: Pembrolizumab showed antitumor activity and was usually safe for treating extensive-stage small cell lung cancer.

Major finding: The objective response rate was 33%. Two patients developed grade 3 or worse treatment-related adverse events, which included fatal mesenteric ischemia and colitis.

Data source: A phase 1b open-label trial of 24 patients with PD-L1–positive extensive-stage small cell lung cancer.

Disclosures: Merck funded the study. Dr. Ott disclosed research funding from Merck and several other pharmaceutical companies, and advisory or consulting relationships with several companies, excluding Merck.

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Intraoperative ketamine makes no dent in postop delirium or pain

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Wed, 01/02/2019 - 09:57

 

A single subanesthetic, intraoperative dose of ketamine does little or nothing to reduce postoperative delirium, according to data from the PODCAST trial.

Postoperative delirium remains a problem without an effective solution, wrote Michael S. Avidan, MBBCh, FCASA, of Washington University, Saint Louis, and his colleagues (Lancet 2017;390[10091]:267-75).

Recent guidelines published by the American Pain Society, the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists’ Committee on Regional Anesthesia, Executive Committee, and Administrative Council include ketamine as a recommended component of multimodal pain therapy for several commonly performed surgeries. “Before recommending widespread administration of an intraoperative bolus of subanaesthetic ketamine, demonstrating that ketamine decreases either delirium or pain, or both, without incurring adverse effects in a large, pragmatic trial was warranted,” the researchers said.

In the PODCAST (Prevention of Delirium and Complications Associated With Surgical Treatments) trial, the researchers randomized 672 patients over the age of 60 undergoing major open surgery under general anesthesia (such as open cardiac or noncardiac surgery, urological surgery, gynecologic surgery, or intra-abdominal surgery) to 0.5 mg/kg ketamine (227), 1.0 mg/kg ketamine (223), or placebo (222). The ketamine or placebo was given after anesthesia and before surgical incision.

Overall, no difference in the incidence of delirium occurred between patients in the combined ketamine groups (19.5%) and the placebo group (19.8%), and there was no significant difference in delirium across all three treatment groups.

No differences in pain based on visual analog scale scores were observed across the three groups, and overall adverse event rates were similar as well: approximately 40.8% in the 1.0-mg ketamine group, 39.6% in the 0.5-mg ketamine group, and 36.9% in the placebo group.

Surgeons work on a patient in the operating room
Dmitrii Kotin/Thinkstock
In addition, ketamine was associated with significantly more reports of postoperative hallucinations and nightmares, compared with placebo, over a period of 3 postoperative days. The reports of both hallucinations and nightmares increased with the higher ketamine dose. Hallucinations were reported by 18% of placebo patients, 20% of 0.5-mg ketamine patients, and 28% of 1.0-mg ketamine patients; nightmares were reported by 8%, 12%, and 15% of patients in the three groups, respectively.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including a study population potentially too small to show an effect of ketamine on delirium, and a lack of data on other variables that might contribute to delirium and pain, the researchers noted. However, the results suggest that “despite present evidence and guidelines, the administration of a subanaesthetic ketamine dose during surgery is not useful for preventing postoperative delirium (primary outcome) or reducing postoperative pain and minimising opioid consumption (related secondary outcomes),” and appears to increase postoperative hallucinations and nightmares to an extent that might be prohibitive, they said.

The National Institutes of Health and Cancer Center Support funded the study. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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A single subanesthetic, intraoperative dose of ketamine does little or nothing to reduce postoperative delirium, according to data from the PODCAST trial.

Postoperative delirium remains a problem without an effective solution, wrote Michael S. Avidan, MBBCh, FCASA, of Washington University, Saint Louis, and his colleagues (Lancet 2017;390[10091]:267-75).

Recent guidelines published by the American Pain Society, the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists’ Committee on Regional Anesthesia, Executive Committee, and Administrative Council include ketamine as a recommended component of multimodal pain therapy for several commonly performed surgeries. “Before recommending widespread administration of an intraoperative bolus of subanaesthetic ketamine, demonstrating that ketamine decreases either delirium or pain, or both, without incurring adverse effects in a large, pragmatic trial was warranted,” the researchers said.

In the PODCAST (Prevention of Delirium and Complications Associated With Surgical Treatments) trial, the researchers randomized 672 patients over the age of 60 undergoing major open surgery under general anesthesia (such as open cardiac or noncardiac surgery, urological surgery, gynecologic surgery, or intra-abdominal surgery) to 0.5 mg/kg ketamine (227), 1.0 mg/kg ketamine (223), or placebo (222). The ketamine or placebo was given after anesthesia and before surgical incision.

Overall, no difference in the incidence of delirium occurred between patients in the combined ketamine groups (19.5%) and the placebo group (19.8%), and there was no significant difference in delirium across all three treatment groups.

No differences in pain based on visual analog scale scores were observed across the three groups, and overall adverse event rates were similar as well: approximately 40.8% in the 1.0-mg ketamine group, 39.6% in the 0.5-mg ketamine group, and 36.9% in the placebo group.

Surgeons work on a patient in the operating room
Dmitrii Kotin/Thinkstock
In addition, ketamine was associated with significantly more reports of postoperative hallucinations and nightmares, compared with placebo, over a period of 3 postoperative days. The reports of both hallucinations and nightmares increased with the higher ketamine dose. Hallucinations were reported by 18% of placebo patients, 20% of 0.5-mg ketamine patients, and 28% of 1.0-mg ketamine patients; nightmares were reported by 8%, 12%, and 15% of patients in the three groups, respectively.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including a study population potentially too small to show an effect of ketamine on delirium, and a lack of data on other variables that might contribute to delirium and pain, the researchers noted. However, the results suggest that “despite present evidence and guidelines, the administration of a subanaesthetic ketamine dose during surgery is not useful for preventing postoperative delirium (primary outcome) or reducing postoperative pain and minimising opioid consumption (related secondary outcomes),” and appears to increase postoperative hallucinations and nightmares to an extent that might be prohibitive, they said.

The National Institutes of Health and Cancer Center Support funded the study. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

 

A single subanesthetic, intraoperative dose of ketamine does little or nothing to reduce postoperative delirium, according to data from the PODCAST trial.

Postoperative delirium remains a problem without an effective solution, wrote Michael S. Avidan, MBBCh, FCASA, of Washington University, Saint Louis, and his colleagues (Lancet 2017;390[10091]:267-75).

Recent guidelines published by the American Pain Society, the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, and the American Society of Anesthesiologists’ Committee on Regional Anesthesia, Executive Committee, and Administrative Council include ketamine as a recommended component of multimodal pain therapy for several commonly performed surgeries. “Before recommending widespread administration of an intraoperative bolus of subanaesthetic ketamine, demonstrating that ketamine decreases either delirium or pain, or both, without incurring adverse effects in a large, pragmatic trial was warranted,” the researchers said.

In the PODCAST (Prevention of Delirium and Complications Associated With Surgical Treatments) trial, the researchers randomized 672 patients over the age of 60 undergoing major open surgery under general anesthesia (such as open cardiac or noncardiac surgery, urological surgery, gynecologic surgery, or intra-abdominal surgery) to 0.5 mg/kg ketamine (227), 1.0 mg/kg ketamine (223), or placebo (222). The ketamine or placebo was given after anesthesia and before surgical incision.

Overall, no difference in the incidence of delirium occurred between patients in the combined ketamine groups (19.5%) and the placebo group (19.8%), and there was no significant difference in delirium across all three treatment groups.

No differences in pain based on visual analog scale scores were observed across the three groups, and overall adverse event rates were similar as well: approximately 40.8% in the 1.0-mg ketamine group, 39.6% in the 0.5-mg ketamine group, and 36.9% in the placebo group.

Surgeons work on a patient in the operating room
Dmitrii Kotin/Thinkstock
In addition, ketamine was associated with significantly more reports of postoperative hallucinations and nightmares, compared with placebo, over a period of 3 postoperative days. The reports of both hallucinations and nightmares increased with the higher ketamine dose. Hallucinations were reported by 18% of placebo patients, 20% of 0.5-mg ketamine patients, and 28% of 1.0-mg ketamine patients; nightmares were reported by 8%, 12%, and 15% of patients in the three groups, respectively.

The study findings were limited by several factors, including a study population potentially too small to show an effect of ketamine on delirium, and a lack of data on other variables that might contribute to delirium and pain, the researchers noted. However, the results suggest that “despite present evidence and guidelines, the administration of a subanaesthetic ketamine dose during surgery is not useful for preventing postoperative delirium (primary outcome) or reducing postoperative pain and minimising opioid consumption (related secondary outcomes),” and appears to increase postoperative hallucinations and nightmares to an extent that might be prohibitive, they said.

The National Institutes of Health and Cancer Center Support funded the study. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Key clinical point: Ketamine failed to reduce postoperative delirium in older adults.

Major finding: No difference was observed in the incidence of postoperative delirium between patients given ketamine before surgical incision and patients on placebo.

Data source: The Prevention of Delirium and Complications Associated With Surgical Treatments study, a randomized, multicenter trial of 672 adults older than 60 years.

Disclosures: The National Institutes of Health and Cancer Center Support funded the study. The researchers had no financial conflicts to disclose.

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Cancer screening in elderly: When to just say no

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Fri, 01/18/2019 - 16:58

– A simple walking speed measurement over a 20-foot distance is an invaluable guide to physiologic age as part of individualized decision making about when to stop cancer screening in elderly patients, according to Jeff Wallace, MD, professor of geriatric medicine at the University of Colorado at Denver.

“If you have one measurement to assess ‘am I aging well?’ it’s your gait speed. A lot of us in geriatrics are advocating evaluation of gait speed in all patients as a fifth vital sign. It’s probably more useful than blood pressure in some of the older adults coming into our clinics,” he said at a conference on internal medicine sponsored by the University of Colorado.
 

 

Dr. Wallace also gave a shout-out to the ePrognosis cancer-screening decision tool, available free at www.eprognosis.org, as an aid in shared decision-making conversations regarding when to stop cancer screening. This tool, developed by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, allows physicians to plug key individual patient characteristics into its model, including comorbid conditions, functional status, and body mass index, and then spits out data-driven estimated benefits and harms a patient can expect from advanced-age screening for colon or breast cancer.

Of course, guidelines as to when to stop screening for various cancers are available from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, the American Cancer Society, and specialty societies. However, it’s important that nongeriatricians understand the serious limitations of those guidelines.

“We’re not guidelines followers in the geriatrics world because the guidelines don’t apply to most of our patients,” he explained. “We hate guidelines in geriatrics because few studies – and no lung cancer or breast cancer trials – enroll patients over age 75 with comorbid conditions. Also, most of these guidelines do not incorporate patient preferences, which probably should be a primary goal. So we’re left extrapolating.“

Regrettably, though, “it turns out most Americans are drinking the Kool-Aid when it comes to patient preferences. It’s amazing how much cancer screening is going on in this country. We’re doing a lot more than we should,” said Dr. Wallace.

Dr. Jeff Wallace, professor of geriatric medicine, University of Colorado
Dr. Jeff Wallace
He highlighted a University of North Carolina study of more than 27,000 participants aged 65 years or older in the population-based National Health Interview Survey. Among those deemed at very high risk of mortality within 9 years, 55% of men had recently undergone prostate cancer screening, and 53% of women had recently had a mammogram. Up to 56% of women who underwent a hysterectomy for benign reasons had a Pap test within the previous 3 years. Moreover, more than one-third of women with less than a 5-year life expectancy had a recent mammogram (JAMA Intern Med. 2014 Oct;174[10]:1558-65).

All of that is clearly overscreening. Experts unanimously agree that if someone is not going to live for 10 years, that person is not likely to benefit from cancer screening. The one exception is lung cancer screening of high-risk patients, where there are data to show that annual low-dose CT screening is beneficial in those with even a 5-year life expectancy.

As part of the Choosing Wisely program, the American Geriatric Society has advocated that physicians “don’t recommend screening for breast, colorectal, prostate, or lung cancer without considering life expectancy and the risks of testing, overdiagnosis, and overtreatment.”

That’s where gait speed and ePrognosis come in handy in discussions with patients regarding what they can realistically expect from cancer screening at an advanced age.

The importance of gait speed was highlighted in a pooled analysis of nine cohort studies totaling more than 34,000 community-dwelling adults aged 65 years and older with 6-21 years of follow-up. Investigators at the University of Pittsburgh identified a strong relationship between gait speed and survival. Every 0.1-m/sec made a significant difference (JAMA. 2011 Jan 5;305[1]:50-8).

A gait speed evaluation is simple: The patient is asked to walk 20 feet at a normal speed, not racing. For men age 75, the Pittsburgh investigators found, gait speed predicted 10-year survival across a range of 19%-87%. The median speed was 0.8 m/sec, or about 1.8 mph, so a middle-of-the-pack walker ought to stop all cancer screening by age 75. A fast-walking older man won’t reach a 10-year remaining life expectancy until he’s in his early to mid-80s; a slow walker reaches that life expectancy as early as his late 60s, depending upon just how slow he walks. A woman at age 80 with an average gait speed has roughly 10 years of remaining life, factoring in plus or minus 5 years from that landmark depending upon whether she is a faster- or slower-than-average walker, Dr. Wallace explained.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force currently recommends colon cancer screening routinely for 50- to 75-year-olds, declaring in accord with other groups that this strategy has a high certainty of substantial net benefit. But the USPSTF also recommends selective screening for those aged 76-85, with a weaker C recommendation (JAMA. 2016 Jun 21;315[23]:2564-75).

What are the practical implications of that recommendation for selective screening after age 75?

Investigators at Harvard Medical School and the University of Oslo recently took a closer look. Their population-based, prospective, observational study included 1,355,692 Medicare beneficiaries aged 70-79 years at average risk for colorectal cancer who had not had a colonoscopy within the previous 5 years.

The investigators demonstrated that the benefit of screening colonoscopy decreased with age. For patients aged 70-74, the 8-year risk of colorectal cancer was 2.19% in those who were screened, compared with 2.62% in those who weren’t, for an absolute 0.43% difference. The number needed to be screened to detect one additional case of colorectal cancer was 283. Among those aged 75-79, the number needed to be screened climbed to 714 (Ann Intern Med. 2017 Jan 3;166[1]18-26).

Moreover, the risk of colonoscopy-related adverse events also climbed with age. These included perforations, falls while racing to the bathroom during the preprocedural bowel prep, and the humiliation of fecal incontinence. The excess 30-day risk for any adverse event in the colonoscopy group was 5.6 events per 1,000 patients aged 70-74 and 10.3 per 1,000 in 75- to 79-year-olds.

In a similar vein, Mara A. Schonberg, MD, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, has shed light on the risks and benefits of biannual mammographic screening for breast cancer in 70- to 79-year-olds, a practice recommended in American Cancer Society guidelines for women who are in overall good health and have at least a 10-year life expectancy.

She estimated that 2 women per 1,000 screened would avoid death due to breast cancer, for a number needed to screen of 500. But roughly 200 of those 1,000 women would experience a false-positive mammogram, and 20-40 of those false-positive imaging studies would result in a breast biopsy. Also, roughly 30% of the screen-detected cancers would not otherwise become apparent in an older woman’s lifetime, yet nearly all of the malignancies would undergo breast cancer therapy (J Am Geriatr Soc. 2016 Dec;64[12]:2413-8).

Dr. Schonberg’s research speaks to Dr. Wallace.

“It’s breast cancer therapy: It’s procedures; it’s medicalizing the patient’s whole life and creating a high degree of angst when she’s 75 or 80,” he said.

As to when to ‘just say no’ to cancer screening, Dr. Wallace said his answer is after age 65 for cervical cancer screening in women with at least two normal screens in the past 10 years or a prior total hysterectomy for a benign indication. All of the guidelines agree on that, although the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends in addition that women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 2 be screened for the next 20 years.

For prostate cancer, Dr. Wallace recommends his colleagues just say no to screening at age 70 and above because harm is more likely than benefit to ensue.

“I don’t know about you, but I have a ton of patients over age 70 asking me for PSAs. That’s one place I won’t do any screening. I tell them I know you’re in great shape for 76 and you think it’s a good idea, but I think it’s bad medicine and I won’t do it. Even the American Urological Association says don’t do it after age 70,” he said.

For prostate cancer screening at age 55-69, however, patient preference rules the day, he added.

He draws the line at any cancer screening in patients aged 90 or over. Mean survival at age 90 is another 4-5 years. Only 11% of 90-year-old women will reach 100.

“Everybody has to die eventually,” he mused.

Dr. Wallace reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.
 

 

 

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– A simple walking speed measurement over a 20-foot distance is an invaluable guide to physiologic age as part of individualized decision making about when to stop cancer screening in elderly patients, according to Jeff Wallace, MD, professor of geriatric medicine at the University of Colorado at Denver.

“If you have one measurement to assess ‘am I aging well?’ it’s your gait speed. A lot of us in geriatrics are advocating evaluation of gait speed in all patients as a fifth vital sign. It’s probably more useful than blood pressure in some of the older adults coming into our clinics,” he said at a conference on internal medicine sponsored by the University of Colorado.
 

 

Dr. Wallace also gave a shout-out to the ePrognosis cancer-screening decision tool, available free at www.eprognosis.org, as an aid in shared decision-making conversations regarding when to stop cancer screening. This tool, developed by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, allows physicians to plug key individual patient characteristics into its model, including comorbid conditions, functional status, and body mass index, and then spits out data-driven estimated benefits and harms a patient can expect from advanced-age screening for colon or breast cancer.

Of course, guidelines as to when to stop screening for various cancers are available from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, the American Cancer Society, and specialty societies. However, it’s important that nongeriatricians understand the serious limitations of those guidelines.

“We’re not guidelines followers in the geriatrics world because the guidelines don’t apply to most of our patients,” he explained. “We hate guidelines in geriatrics because few studies – and no lung cancer or breast cancer trials – enroll patients over age 75 with comorbid conditions. Also, most of these guidelines do not incorporate patient preferences, which probably should be a primary goal. So we’re left extrapolating.“

Regrettably, though, “it turns out most Americans are drinking the Kool-Aid when it comes to patient preferences. It’s amazing how much cancer screening is going on in this country. We’re doing a lot more than we should,” said Dr. Wallace.

Dr. Jeff Wallace, professor of geriatric medicine, University of Colorado
Dr. Jeff Wallace
He highlighted a University of North Carolina study of more than 27,000 participants aged 65 years or older in the population-based National Health Interview Survey. Among those deemed at very high risk of mortality within 9 years, 55% of men had recently undergone prostate cancer screening, and 53% of women had recently had a mammogram. Up to 56% of women who underwent a hysterectomy for benign reasons had a Pap test within the previous 3 years. Moreover, more than one-third of women with less than a 5-year life expectancy had a recent mammogram (JAMA Intern Med. 2014 Oct;174[10]:1558-65).

All of that is clearly overscreening. Experts unanimously agree that if someone is not going to live for 10 years, that person is not likely to benefit from cancer screening. The one exception is lung cancer screening of high-risk patients, where there are data to show that annual low-dose CT screening is beneficial in those with even a 5-year life expectancy.

As part of the Choosing Wisely program, the American Geriatric Society has advocated that physicians “don’t recommend screening for breast, colorectal, prostate, or lung cancer without considering life expectancy and the risks of testing, overdiagnosis, and overtreatment.”

That’s where gait speed and ePrognosis come in handy in discussions with patients regarding what they can realistically expect from cancer screening at an advanced age.

The importance of gait speed was highlighted in a pooled analysis of nine cohort studies totaling more than 34,000 community-dwelling adults aged 65 years and older with 6-21 years of follow-up. Investigators at the University of Pittsburgh identified a strong relationship between gait speed and survival. Every 0.1-m/sec made a significant difference (JAMA. 2011 Jan 5;305[1]:50-8).

A gait speed evaluation is simple: The patient is asked to walk 20 feet at a normal speed, not racing. For men age 75, the Pittsburgh investigators found, gait speed predicted 10-year survival across a range of 19%-87%. The median speed was 0.8 m/sec, or about 1.8 mph, so a middle-of-the-pack walker ought to stop all cancer screening by age 75. A fast-walking older man won’t reach a 10-year remaining life expectancy until he’s in his early to mid-80s; a slow walker reaches that life expectancy as early as his late 60s, depending upon just how slow he walks. A woman at age 80 with an average gait speed has roughly 10 years of remaining life, factoring in plus or minus 5 years from that landmark depending upon whether she is a faster- or slower-than-average walker, Dr. Wallace explained.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force currently recommends colon cancer screening routinely for 50- to 75-year-olds, declaring in accord with other groups that this strategy has a high certainty of substantial net benefit. But the USPSTF also recommends selective screening for those aged 76-85, with a weaker C recommendation (JAMA. 2016 Jun 21;315[23]:2564-75).

What are the practical implications of that recommendation for selective screening after age 75?

Investigators at Harvard Medical School and the University of Oslo recently took a closer look. Their population-based, prospective, observational study included 1,355,692 Medicare beneficiaries aged 70-79 years at average risk for colorectal cancer who had not had a colonoscopy within the previous 5 years.

The investigators demonstrated that the benefit of screening colonoscopy decreased with age. For patients aged 70-74, the 8-year risk of colorectal cancer was 2.19% in those who were screened, compared with 2.62% in those who weren’t, for an absolute 0.43% difference. The number needed to be screened to detect one additional case of colorectal cancer was 283. Among those aged 75-79, the number needed to be screened climbed to 714 (Ann Intern Med. 2017 Jan 3;166[1]18-26).

Moreover, the risk of colonoscopy-related adverse events also climbed with age. These included perforations, falls while racing to the bathroom during the preprocedural bowel prep, and the humiliation of fecal incontinence. The excess 30-day risk for any adverse event in the colonoscopy group was 5.6 events per 1,000 patients aged 70-74 and 10.3 per 1,000 in 75- to 79-year-olds.

In a similar vein, Mara A. Schonberg, MD, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, has shed light on the risks and benefits of biannual mammographic screening for breast cancer in 70- to 79-year-olds, a practice recommended in American Cancer Society guidelines for women who are in overall good health and have at least a 10-year life expectancy.

She estimated that 2 women per 1,000 screened would avoid death due to breast cancer, for a number needed to screen of 500. But roughly 200 of those 1,000 women would experience a false-positive mammogram, and 20-40 of those false-positive imaging studies would result in a breast biopsy. Also, roughly 30% of the screen-detected cancers would not otherwise become apparent in an older woman’s lifetime, yet nearly all of the malignancies would undergo breast cancer therapy (J Am Geriatr Soc. 2016 Dec;64[12]:2413-8).

Dr. Schonberg’s research speaks to Dr. Wallace.

“It’s breast cancer therapy: It’s procedures; it’s medicalizing the patient’s whole life and creating a high degree of angst when she’s 75 or 80,” he said.

As to when to ‘just say no’ to cancer screening, Dr. Wallace said his answer is after age 65 for cervical cancer screening in women with at least two normal screens in the past 10 years or a prior total hysterectomy for a benign indication. All of the guidelines agree on that, although the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends in addition that women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 2 be screened for the next 20 years.

For prostate cancer, Dr. Wallace recommends his colleagues just say no to screening at age 70 and above because harm is more likely than benefit to ensue.

“I don’t know about you, but I have a ton of patients over age 70 asking me for PSAs. That’s one place I won’t do any screening. I tell them I know you’re in great shape for 76 and you think it’s a good idea, but I think it’s bad medicine and I won’t do it. Even the American Urological Association says don’t do it after age 70,” he said.

For prostate cancer screening at age 55-69, however, patient preference rules the day, he added.

He draws the line at any cancer screening in patients aged 90 or over. Mean survival at age 90 is another 4-5 years. Only 11% of 90-year-old women will reach 100.

“Everybody has to die eventually,” he mused.

Dr. Wallace reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.
 

 

 

– A simple walking speed measurement over a 20-foot distance is an invaluable guide to physiologic age as part of individualized decision making about when to stop cancer screening in elderly patients, according to Jeff Wallace, MD, professor of geriatric medicine at the University of Colorado at Denver.

“If you have one measurement to assess ‘am I aging well?’ it’s your gait speed. A lot of us in geriatrics are advocating evaluation of gait speed in all patients as a fifth vital sign. It’s probably more useful than blood pressure in some of the older adults coming into our clinics,” he said at a conference on internal medicine sponsored by the University of Colorado.
 

 

Dr. Wallace also gave a shout-out to the ePrognosis cancer-screening decision tool, available free at www.eprognosis.org, as an aid in shared decision-making conversations regarding when to stop cancer screening. This tool, developed by researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, allows physicians to plug key individual patient characteristics into its model, including comorbid conditions, functional status, and body mass index, and then spits out data-driven estimated benefits and harms a patient can expect from advanced-age screening for colon or breast cancer.

Of course, guidelines as to when to stop screening for various cancers are available from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, the American Cancer Society, and specialty societies. However, it’s important that nongeriatricians understand the serious limitations of those guidelines.

“We’re not guidelines followers in the geriatrics world because the guidelines don’t apply to most of our patients,” he explained. “We hate guidelines in geriatrics because few studies – and no lung cancer or breast cancer trials – enroll patients over age 75 with comorbid conditions. Also, most of these guidelines do not incorporate patient preferences, which probably should be a primary goal. So we’re left extrapolating.“

Regrettably, though, “it turns out most Americans are drinking the Kool-Aid when it comes to patient preferences. It’s amazing how much cancer screening is going on in this country. We’re doing a lot more than we should,” said Dr. Wallace.

Dr. Jeff Wallace, professor of geriatric medicine, University of Colorado
Dr. Jeff Wallace
He highlighted a University of North Carolina study of more than 27,000 participants aged 65 years or older in the population-based National Health Interview Survey. Among those deemed at very high risk of mortality within 9 years, 55% of men had recently undergone prostate cancer screening, and 53% of women had recently had a mammogram. Up to 56% of women who underwent a hysterectomy for benign reasons had a Pap test within the previous 3 years. Moreover, more than one-third of women with less than a 5-year life expectancy had a recent mammogram (JAMA Intern Med. 2014 Oct;174[10]:1558-65).

All of that is clearly overscreening. Experts unanimously agree that if someone is not going to live for 10 years, that person is not likely to benefit from cancer screening. The one exception is lung cancer screening of high-risk patients, where there are data to show that annual low-dose CT screening is beneficial in those with even a 5-year life expectancy.

As part of the Choosing Wisely program, the American Geriatric Society has advocated that physicians “don’t recommend screening for breast, colorectal, prostate, or lung cancer without considering life expectancy and the risks of testing, overdiagnosis, and overtreatment.”

That’s where gait speed and ePrognosis come in handy in discussions with patients regarding what they can realistically expect from cancer screening at an advanced age.

The importance of gait speed was highlighted in a pooled analysis of nine cohort studies totaling more than 34,000 community-dwelling adults aged 65 years and older with 6-21 years of follow-up. Investigators at the University of Pittsburgh identified a strong relationship between gait speed and survival. Every 0.1-m/sec made a significant difference (JAMA. 2011 Jan 5;305[1]:50-8).

A gait speed evaluation is simple: The patient is asked to walk 20 feet at a normal speed, not racing. For men age 75, the Pittsburgh investigators found, gait speed predicted 10-year survival across a range of 19%-87%. The median speed was 0.8 m/sec, or about 1.8 mph, so a middle-of-the-pack walker ought to stop all cancer screening by age 75. A fast-walking older man won’t reach a 10-year remaining life expectancy until he’s in his early to mid-80s; a slow walker reaches that life expectancy as early as his late 60s, depending upon just how slow he walks. A woman at age 80 with an average gait speed has roughly 10 years of remaining life, factoring in plus or minus 5 years from that landmark depending upon whether she is a faster- or slower-than-average walker, Dr. Wallace explained.

The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force currently recommends colon cancer screening routinely for 50- to 75-year-olds, declaring in accord with other groups that this strategy has a high certainty of substantial net benefit. But the USPSTF also recommends selective screening for those aged 76-85, with a weaker C recommendation (JAMA. 2016 Jun 21;315[23]:2564-75).

What are the practical implications of that recommendation for selective screening after age 75?

Investigators at Harvard Medical School and the University of Oslo recently took a closer look. Their population-based, prospective, observational study included 1,355,692 Medicare beneficiaries aged 70-79 years at average risk for colorectal cancer who had not had a colonoscopy within the previous 5 years.

The investigators demonstrated that the benefit of screening colonoscopy decreased with age. For patients aged 70-74, the 8-year risk of colorectal cancer was 2.19% in those who were screened, compared with 2.62% in those who weren’t, for an absolute 0.43% difference. The number needed to be screened to detect one additional case of colorectal cancer was 283. Among those aged 75-79, the number needed to be screened climbed to 714 (Ann Intern Med. 2017 Jan 3;166[1]18-26).

Moreover, the risk of colonoscopy-related adverse events also climbed with age. These included perforations, falls while racing to the bathroom during the preprocedural bowel prep, and the humiliation of fecal incontinence. The excess 30-day risk for any adverse event in the colonoscopy group was 5.6 events per 1,000 patients aged 70-74 and 10.3 per 1,000 in 75- to 79-year-olds.

In a similar vein, Mara A. Schonberg, MD, of Harvard Medical School, Boston, has shed light on the risks and benefits of biannual mammographic screening for breast cancer in 70- to 79-year-olds, a practice recommended in American Cancer Society guidelines for women who are in overall good health and have at least a 10-year life expectancy.

She estimated that 2 women per 1,000 screened would avoid death due to breast cancer, for a number needed to screen of 500. But roughly 200 of those 1,000 women would experience a false-positive mammogram, and 20-40 of those false-positive imaging studies would result in a breast biopsy. Also, roughly 30% of the screen-detected cancers would not otherwise become apparent in an older woman’s lifetime, yet nearly all of the malignancies would undergo breast cancer therapy (J Am Geriatr Soc. 2016 Dec;64[12]:2413-8).

Dr. Schonberg’s research speaks to Dr. Wallace.

“It’s breast cancer therapy: It’s procedures; it’s medicalizing the patient’s whole life and creating a high degree of angst when she’s 75 or 80,” he said.

As to when to ‘just say no’ to cancer screening, Dr. Wallace said his answer is after age 65 for cervical cancer screening in women with at least two normal screens in the past 10 years or a prior total hysterectomy for a benign indication. All of the guidelines agree on that, although the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends in addition that women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia 2 be screened for the next 20 years.

For prostate cancer, Dr. Wallace recommends his colleagues just say no to screening at age 70 and above because harm is more likely than benefit to ensue.

“I don’t know about you, but I have a ton of patients over age 70 asking me for PSAs. That’s one place I won’t do any screening. I tell them I know you’re in great shape for 76 and you think it’s a good idea, but I think it’s bad medicine and I won’t do it. Even the American Urological Association says don’t do it after age 70,” he said.

For prostate cancer screening at age 55-69, however, patient preference rules the day, he added.

He draws the line at any cancer screening in patients aged 90 or over. Mean survival at age 90 is another 4-5 years. Only 11% of 90-year-old women will reach 100.

“Everybody has to die eventually,” he mused.

Dr. Wallace reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.
 

 

 

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Wide variability found in invasive mediastinal staging rates for lung cancer

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– Significant variability exists between hospitals in Washington state in their rates of invasive mediastinal staging for lung cancer, Farhood Farjah, MD, reported at the annual meeting of the Western Thoracic Surgical Association.

“We found evidence of a fivefold variation in hospital-level rates of invasive mediastinal staging not explained by chance or case mix,” according to Dr. Farjah of the University of Washington, Seattle.

Dr. Farood FarjahUniversity of Washington, Seattle
Dr. Farood Farjah
Prior studies from across the country have documented widespread underutilization of invasive mediastinal staging in situations where the staging is recommended in major guidelines such as those published by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.

“This has led to substantial concerns about quality of thoracic surgical care in the community at large,” he noted.

The Washington study is the first to show hospital-by-hospital variation in rates of invasive mediastinal staging.

Invasive mediastinal staging for lung cancer is considered important because imaging is known to have a substantial false-negative rate, and staging results have a profound impact on treatment recommendations, which can range from surgery alone to additional chemoradiation therapy.

Yet the meaning of the hospital-level huge variability in practice observed in the Washington study remains unclear.

“Our understanding of the underutilization of invasive mediastinal staging is further complicated by the fact that patterns of invasive mediastinal staging are highly variable across hospitals staffed by at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice,” Dr. Farjah explained. “This variability could be a marker of poor-quality care. However, because the guidelines are not supported by level 1 evidence, it’s equally plausible that this variability might represent uncertainty or even disagreement with the practice guidelines – and specifically about the appropriate indication for invasive staging.”

He presented a retrospective cohort study of 406 patients whose non–small cell lung cancer was resected during July 2011–December 2013 at one of five Washington hospitals, each with at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice on staff. The four participating community hospitals and one academic medical center were involved in a National Cancer Institute–funded, physician-led quality improvement initiative.

Overall, 66% of the 406 patients underwent any form of invasive mediastinal staging: 85% by mediastinoscopy only; 12% by mediastinoscopy plus endobronchial ultrasound-guided nodal aspiration (EBUS); 3% by EBUS only; and the remaining handful by mediastinoscopy, EBUS, and esophageal ultrasound-guided nodal aspiration. The invasive staging was performed at the time of resection in 64% of cases. A median of three nodal stations were sampled.

After statistical adjustment for random variation and between-hospital differences in clinical stage, rates of invasive staging were all over the map. While an overall mean of 66% of the lung cancer patients underwent invasive mediastinal staging, the rates at the five hospitals were 94%, 84%, 31%, 80%, and 17%.

Dr. Farjah and his coinvestigators are now conducting provider interviews and focus groups in an effort to understand what drove the participating surgeons’ wide variability in performing invasive mediastinal staging.

Discussant Jane Yanagawa, MD, of the University of California, Los Angeles, commented, “I think this is a really interesting study because, historically, lower rates of mediastinoscopy are assumed to be a reflection of low-quality care – and you suggest that might not be the case, that it might be more complicated than that.”

Dr. Yanagawa sketched one fairly common scenario that might represent a surgeon’s reasonable avoidance of guideline-recommended invasive mediastinal staging: a patient who by all preoperative imaging appears to have stage IA lung cancer and wishes to avoid the morbidity, time, and cost of needle biopsy, instead choosing to go straight to the operating room for a diagnosis by wedge resection, followed by a completion lobectomy based upon the frozen section results. Could such a pathway account for the variability seen in the Washington study?

“I think it could have,” Dr. Farjah replied. “I would say that’s probably one driver of variability.”

As for the generalizability of the findings of a five-hospital study carried out in a single state, Dr. Farjah said he thinks the results are applicable to any academic or community hospital with at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice.

He reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding the study.

Body

M. Patricia Rivera, MD, FCCP, comments: Staging of lung cancer is essential to select the best treatment strategy for a given patient. However, despite multiple guideline recommendations

Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
for mediastinal staging, a significant number of stage IIIA NSCLC do not receive guideline-adherent mediastinal staging. This study highlights the marked variability in mediastinal staging that persists across clinical centers. Lower rates of mediastinal staging have been blamed on lack of board-certified thoracic surgeons with training in mediastinoscopy, but in this study, each center involved had at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon. Striking is that only a small percentage (15%) of patients in this study underwent staging with bronchoscopic ultrasound-guided needle aspiration. Given the high sensitivity and low invasiveness, ultrasound-guided staging modalities should be considered before surgical techniques for hilar and mediastinal staging. The “gold standard” of mediastinoscopy for invasive staging is challenged by ultrasound-guided techniques, which guidelines recommend to be the initial invasive test in most instances for which lymph node staging is required. This study underscores the importance of continual education and training of pulmonologists and thoracic surgeons in ultrasound-guided techniques in order to improve mediastinal staging application and accuracy.

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Body

M. Patricia Rivera, MD, FCCP, comments: Staging of lung cancer is essential to select the best treatment strategy for a given patient. However, despite multiple guideline recommendations

Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
for mediastinal staging, a significant number of stage IIIA NSCLC do not receive guideline-adherent mediastinal staging. This study highlights the marked variability in mediastinal staging that persists across clinical centers. Lower rates of mediastinal staging have been blamed on lack of board-certified thoracic surgeons with training in mediastinoscopy, but in this study, each center involved had at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon. Striking is that only a small percentage (15%) of patients in this study underwent staging with bronchoscopic ultrasound-guided needle aspiration. Given the high sensitivity and low invasiveness, ultrasound-guided staging modalities should be considered before surgical techniques for hilar and mediastinal staging. The “gold standard” of mediastinoscopy for invasive staging is challenged by ultrasound-guided techniques, which guidelines recommend to be the initial invasive test in most instances for which lymph node staging is required. This study underscores the importance of continual education and training of pulmonologists and thoracic surgeons in ultrasound-guided techniques in order to improve mediastinal staging application and accuracy.

Body

M. Patricia Rivera, MD, FCCP, comments: Staging of lung cancer is essential to select the best treatment strategy for a given patient. However, despite multiple guideline recommendations

Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
for mediastinal staging, a significant number of stage IIIA NSCLC do not receive guideline-adherent mediastinal staging. This study highlights the marked variability in mediastinal staging that persists across clinical centers. Lower rates of mediastinal staging have been blamed on lack of board-certified thoracic surgeons with training in mediastinoscopy, but in this study, each center involved had at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon. Striking is that only a small percentage (15%) of patients in this study underwent staging with bronchoscopic ultrasound-guided needle aspiration. Given the high sensitivity and low invasiveness, ultrasound-guided staging modalities should be considered before surgical techniques for hilar and mediastinal staging. The “gold standard” of mediastinoscopy for invasive staging is challenged by ultrasound-guided techniques, which guidelines recommend to be the initial invasive test in most instances for which lymph node staging is required. This study underscores the importance of continual education and training of pulmonologists and thoracic surgeons in ultrasound-guided techniques in order to improve mediastinal staging application and accuracy.

 

– Significant variability exists between hospitals in Washington state in their rates of invasive mediastinal staging for lung cancer, Farhood Farjah, MD, reported at the annual meeting of the Western Thoracic Surgical Association.

“We found evidence of a fivefold variation in hospital-level rates of invasive mediastinal staging not explained by chance or case mix,” according to Dr. Farjah of the University of Washington, Seattle.

Dr. Farood FarjahUniversity of Washington, Seattle
Dr. Farood Farjah
Prior studies from across the country have documented widespread underutilization of invasive mediastinal staging in situations where the staging is recommended in major guidelines such as those published by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.

“This has led to substantial concerns about quality of thoracic surgical care in the community at large,” he noted.

The Washington study is the first to show hospital-by-hospital variation in rates of invasive mediastinal staging.

Invasive mediastinal staging for lung cancer is considered important because imaging is known to have a substantial false-negative rate, and staging results have a profound impact on treatment recommendations, which can range from surgery alone to additional chemoradiation therapy.

Yet the meaning of the hospital-level huge variability in practice observed in the Washington study remains unclear.

“Our understanding of the underutilization of invasive mediastinal staging is further complicated by the fact that patterns of invasive mediastinal staging are highly variable across hospitals staffed by at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice,” Dr. Farjah explained. “This variability could be a marker of poor-quality care. However, because the guidelines are not supported by level 1 evidence, it’s equally plausible that this variability might represent uncertainty or even disagreement with the practice guidelines – and specifically about the appropriate indication for invasive staging.”

He presented a retrospective cohort study of 406 patients whose non–small cell lung cancer was resected during July 2011–December 2013 at one of five Washington hospitals, each with at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice on staff. The four participating community hospitals and one academic medical center were involved in a National Cancer Institute–funded, physician-led quality improvement initiative.

Overall, 66% of the 406 patients underwent any form of invasive mediastinal staging: 85% by mediastinoscopy only; 12% by mediastinoscopy plus endobronchial ultrasound-guided nodal aspiration (EBUS); 3% by EBUS only; and the remaining handful by mediastinoscopy, EBUS, and esophageal ultrasound-guided nodal aspiration. The invasive staging was performed at the time of resection in 64% of cases. A median of three nodal stations were sampled.

After statistical adjustment for random variation and between-hospital differences in clinical stage, rates of invasive staging were all over the map. While an overall mean of 66% of the lung cancer patients underwent invasive mediastinal staging, the rates at the five hospitals were 94%, 84%, 31%, 80%, and 17%.

Dr. Farjah and his coinvestigators are now conducting provider interviews and focus groups in an effort to understand what drove the participating surgeons’ wide variability in performing invasive mediastinal staging.

Discussant Jane Yanagawa, MD, of the University of California, Los Angeles, commented, “I think this is a really interesting study because, historically, lower rates of mediastinoscopy are assumed to be a reflection of low-quality care – and you suggest that might not be the case, that it might be more complicated than that.”

Dr. Yanagawa sketched one fairly common scenario that might represent a surgeon’s reasonable avoidance of guideline-recommended invasive mediastinal staging: a patient who by all preoperative imaging appears to have stage IA lung cancer and wishes to avoid the morbidity, time, and cost of needle biopsy, instead choosing to go straight to the operating room for a diagnosis by wedge resection, followed by a completion lobectomy based upon the frozen section results. Could such a pathway account for the variability seen in the Washington study?

“I think it could have,” Dr. Farjah replied. “I would say that’s probably one driver of variability.”

As for the generalizability of the findings of a five-hospital study carried out in a single state, Dr. Farjah said he thinks the results are applicable to any academic or community hospital with at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice.

He reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding the study.

 

– Significant variability exists between hospitals in Washington state in their rates of invasive mediastinal staging for lung cancer, Farhood Farjah, MD, reported at the annual meeting of the Western Thoracic Surgical Association.

“We found evidence of a fivefold variation in hospital-level rates of invasive mediastinal staging not explained by chance or case mix,” according to Dr. Farjah of the University of Washington, Seattle.

Dr. Farood FarjahUniversity of Washington, Seattle
Dr. Farood Farjah
Prior studies from across the country have documented widespread underutilization of invasive mediastinal staging in situations where the staging is recommended in major guidelines such as those published by the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.

“This has led to substantial concerns about quality of thoracic surgical care in the community at large,” he noted.

The Washington study is the first to show hospital-by-hospital variation in rates of invasive mediastinal staging.

Invasive mediastinal staging for lung cancer is considered important because imaging is known to have a substantial false-negative rate, and staging results have a profound impact on treatment recommendations, which can range from surgery alone to additional chemoradiation therapy.

Yet the meaning of the hospital-level huge variability in practice observed in the Washington study remains unclear.

“Our understanding of the underutilization of invasive mediastinal staging is further complicated by the fact that patterns of invasive mediastinal staging are highly variable across hospitals staffed by at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice,” Dr. Farjah explained. “This variability could be a marker of poor-quality care. However, because the guidelines are not supported by level 1 evidence, it’s equally plausible that this variability might represent uncertainty or even disagreement with the practice guidelines – and specifically about the appropriate indication for invasive staging.”

He presented a retrospective cohort study of 406 patients whose non–small cell lung cancer was resected during July 2011–December 2013 at one of five Washington hospitals, each with at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice on staff. The four participating community hospitals and one academic medical center were involved in a National Cancer Institute–funded, physician-led quality improvement initiative.

Overall, 66% of the 406 patients underwent any form of invasive mediastinal staging: 85% by mediastinoscopy only; 12% by mediastinoscopy plus endobronchial ultrasound-guided nodal aspiration (EBUS); 3% by EBUS only; and the remaining handful by mediastinoscopy, EBUS, and esophageal ultrasound-guided nodal aspiration. The invasive staging was performed at the time of resection in 64% of cases. A median of three nodal stations were sampled.

After statistical adjustment for random variation and between-hospital differences in clinical stage, rates of invasive staging were all over the map. While an overall mean of 66% of the lung cancer patients underwent invasive mediastinal staging, the rates at the five hospitals were 94%, 84%, 31%, 80%, and 17%.

Dr. Farjah and his coinvestigators are now conducting provider interviews and focus groups in an effort to understand what drove the participating surgeons’ wide variability in performing invasive mediastinal staging.

Discussant Jane Yanagawa, MD, of the University of California, Los Angeles, commented, “I think this is a really interesting study because, historically, lower rates of mediastinoscopy are assumed to be a reflection of low-quality care – and you suggest that might not be the case, that it might be more complicated than that.”

Dr. Yanagawa sketched one fairly common scenario that might represent a surgeon’s reasonable avoidance of guideline-recommended invasive mediastinal staging: a patient who by all preoperative imaging appears to have stage IA lung cancer and wishes to avoid the morbidity, time, and cost of needle biopsy, instead choosing to go straight to the operating room for a diagnosis by wedge resection, followed by a completion lobectomy based upon the frozen section results. Could such a pathway account for the variability seen in the Washington study?

“I think it could have,” Dr. Farjah replied. “I would say that’s probably one driver of variability.”

As for the generalizability of the findings of a five-hospital study carried out in a single state, Dr. Farjah said he thinks the results are applicable to any academic or community hospital with at least one board-certified thoracic surgeon with a noncardiac practice.

He reported having no financial conflicts of interest regarding the study.

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Key clinical point: Hospital-level rates of invasive mediastinal staging for lung cancer varied more than fivefold in a Washington state study.

Major finding: Rates of invasive mediastinal staging after adjustment for clinical stage ranged from a low of 17% at one hospital to as high as 94% at another.

Data source: This retrospective cohort study included 406 patients.

Disclosures: Dr. Farjah reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

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Short, simple antibiotic courses effective in latent TB

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Fri, 01/18/2019 - 16:56

 

Latent tuberculosis infection can be safely and effectively treated with 3- and 4-month medication regimens, including those using once-weekly dosing, according to results from a new meta-analysis.

The findings, published online July 31 in Annals of Internal Medicine, bolster evidence that shorter antibiotic regimens using rifamycins alone or in combination with other drugs are a viable alternative to the longer courses (Ann Intern Med. 2017;167:248-55).

Zerbor/Thinkstock
While the new study looked at efficacy and toxicity across treatment strategies only and found no significant differences between shorter rifamycin-based regimens and isoniazid-based regimens lasting 6 months or longer, short courses are considered likely to see better patient adherence, previous research in latent TB has indicated (BMC Infect Dis. 2016;16:257).

For their research, Dominik Zenner, MD, an epidemiologist with Public Health England in London, and his colleagues updated a meta-analysis they published in 2014. The team added 8 new randomized studies to the 53 that had been included in the earlier paper (Ann Intern Med. 2014 Sep;161:419-28).

Using pairwise comparisons and a Bayesian network analysis, Dr. Zenner and his colleagues found comparable efficacy among isoniazid regimens of 6 months or more; rifampicin-isoniazid regimens of 3 or 4 months, rifampicin-only regimens, and rifampicin-pyrazinamide regimens, compared with placebo (P less than .05 for all).

Importantly, a rifapentine-based regimen in which patients took a weekly dose for 12 weeks was as effective as the others.

“We think that you can get away with shorter regimens,” Dr. Zenner said in an interview. Although 3- to 4-month courses are already recommended in some countries, including the United Kingdom, for most patients with latent TB, “clinicians in some settings have been quite slow to adopt them,” he said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently recommend multiple treatment strategies for latent TB, depending on patient characteristics. These include 6 or 9 months of isoniazid; 3 months of once-weekly isoniazid and rifapentine; or 4 months of daily rifampin.

In the meta-analysis, rifamycin-only regimens performed as well as did those regimens that also used isoniazid, the study showed, suggesting that, for most patients who can safely be treated with rifamycins, “there is no added gain of using isoniazid,” Dr. Zenner said.

He noted that the longer isoniazid-alone regimens are nonetheless effective and appropriate for some, including people who might have potential drug interactions, such as HIV patients taking antiretroviral medications.

About 2 billion people worldwide are estimated to have latent TB, and most will not go on to develop active TB. However, because latent TB acts as the reservoir for active TB, screening of high-risk groups and close contacts of TB patients and treating latent infections is a public health priority.

But many of these asymptomatic patients will get lost between a positive screen result and successful treatment completion, Dr. Zenner said.

“We have huge drop-offs in the cascade of treatment, and treatment completion is one of the worries,” he said. “Whether it makes a huge difference in compliance to take only 12 doses is not sufficiently studied, but it does make a lot of sense. By reducing the pill burden, as we call it, we think that we will see quite good adherence rates – but that’s a subject of further detailed study.”

The investigators noted as a limitation of their study that hepatotoxicity outcomes were not available for all studies and that some of the included trials had a potential for bias. They did not see statistically significant differences in treatment efficacy between regimens in HIV-positive and HIV-negative patients, but noted in their analysis that “efficacy may have been weaker in HIV-positive populations.”

The U.K. National Institute for Health Research provided some funding for Dr. Zenner and his colleagues’ study. One coauthor, Helen Stagg, PhD, reported nonfinancial support from Sanofi during the study, and financial support from Otsuka for unrelated work.


 

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Latent tuberculosis infection can be safely and effectively treated with 3- and 4-month medication regimens, including those using once-weekly dosing, according to results from a new meta-analysis.

The findings, published online July 31 in Annals of Internal Medicine, bolster evidence that shorter antibiotic regimens using rifamycins alone or in combination with other drugs are a viable alternative to the longer courses (Ann Intern Med. 2017;167:248-55).

Zerbor/Thinkstock
While the new study looked at efficacy and toxicity across treatment strategies only and found no significant differences between shorter rifamycin-based regimens and isoniazid-based regimens lasting 6 months or longer, short courses are considered likely to see better patient adherence, previous research in latent TB has indicated (BMC Infect Dis. 2016;16:257).

For their research, Dominik Zenner, MD, an epidemiologist with Public Health England in London, and his colleagues updated a meta-analysis they published in 2014. The team added 8 new randomized studies to the 53 that had been included in the earlier paper (Ann Intern Med. 2014 Sep;161:419-28).

Using pairwise comparisons and a Bayesian network analysis, Dr. Zenner and his colleagues found comparable efficacy among isoniazid regimens of 6 months or more; rifampicin-isoniazid regimens of 3 or 4 months, rifampicin-only regimens, and rifampicin-pyrazinamide regimens, compared with placebo (P less than .05 for all).

Importantly, a rifapentine-based regimen in which patients took a weekly dose for 12 weeks was as effective as the others.

“We think that you can get away with shorter regimens,” Dr. Zenner said in an interview. Although 3- to 4-month courses are already recommended in some countries, including the United Kingdom, for most patients with latent TB, “clinicians in some settings have been quite slow to adopt them,” he said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently recommend multiple treatment strategies for latent TB, depending on patient characteristics. These include 6 or 9 months of isoniazid; 3 months of once-weekly isoniazid and rifapentine; or 4 months of daily rifampin.

In the meta-analysis, rifamycin-only regimens performed as well as did those regimens that also used isoniazid, the study showed, suggesting that, for most patients who can safely be treated with rifamycins, “there is no added gain of using isoniazid,” Dr. Zenner said.

He noted that the longer isoniazid-alone regimens are nonetheless effective and appropriate for some, including people who might have potential drug interactions, such as HIV patients taking antiretroviral medications.

About 2 billion people worldwide are estimated to have latent TB, and most will not go on to develop active TB. However, because latent TB acts as the reservoir for active TB, screening of high-risk groups and close contacts of TB patients and treating latent infections is a public health priority.

But many of these asymptomatic patients will get lost between a positive screen result and successful treatment completion, Dr. Zenner said.

“We have huge drop-offs in the cascade of treatment, and treatment completion is one of the worries,” he said. “Whether it makes a huge difference in compliance to take only 12 doses is not sufficiently studied, but it does make a lot of sense. By reducing the pill burden, as we call it, we think that we will see quite good adherence rates – but that’s a subject of further detailed study.”

The investigators noted as a limitation of their study that hepatotoxicity outcomes were not available for all studies and that some of the included trials had a potential for bias. They did not see statistically significant differences in treatment efficacy between regimens in HIV-positive and HIV-negative patients, but noted in their analysis that “efficacy may have been weaker in HIV-positive populations.”

The U.K. National Institute for Health Research provided some funding for Dr. Zenner and his colleagues’ study. One coauthor, Helen Stagg, PhD, reported nonfinancial support from Sanofi during the study, and financial support from Otsuka for unrelated work.


 

 

Latent tuberculosis infection can be safely and effectively treated with 3- and 4-month medication regimens, including those using once-weekly dosing, according to results from a new meta-analysis.

The findings, published online July 31 in Annals of Internal Medicine, bolster evidence that shorter antibiotic regimens using rifamycins alone or in combination with other drugs are a viable alternative to the longer courses (Ann Intern Med. 2017;167:248-55).

Zerbor/Thinkstock
While the new study looked at efficacy and toxicity across treatment strategies only and found no significant differences between shorter rifamycin-based regimens and isoniazid-based regimens lasting 6 months or longer, short courses are considered likely to see better patient adherence, previous research in latent TB has indicated (BMC Infect Dis. 2016;16:257).

For their research, Dominik Zenner, MD, an epidemiologist with Public Health England in London, and his colleagues updated a meta-analysis they published in 2014. The team added 8 new randomized studies to the 53 that had been included in the earlier paper (Ann Intern Med. 2014 Sep;161:419-28).

Using pairwise comparisons and a Bayesian network analysis, Dr. Zenner and his colleagues found comparable efficacy among isoniazid regimens of 6 months or more; rifampicin-isoniazid regimens of 3 or 4 months, rifampicin-only regimens, and rifampicin-pyrazinamide regimens, compared with placebo (P less than .05 for all).

Importantly, a rifapentine-based regimen in which patients took a weekly dose for 12 weeks was as effective as the others.

“We think that you can get away with shorter regimens,” Dr. Zenner said in an interview. Although 3- to 4-month courses are already recommended in some countries, including the United Kingdom, for most patients with latent TB, “clinicians in some settings have been quite slow to adopt them,” he said.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently recommend multiple treatment strategies for latent TB, depending on patient characteristics. These include 6 or 9 months of isoniazid; 3 months of once-weekly isoniazid and rifapentine; or 4 months of daily rifampin.

In the meta-analysis, rifamycin-only regimens performed as well as did those regimens that also used isoniazid, the study showed, suggesting that, for most patients who can safely be treated with rifamycins, “there is no added gain of using isoniazid,” Dr. Zenner said.

He noted that the longer isoniazid-alone regimens are nonetheless effective and appropriate for some, including people who might have potential drug interactions, such as HIV patients taking antiretroviral medications.

About 2 billion people worldwide are estimated to have latent TB, and most will not go on to develop active TB. However, because latent TB acts as the reservoir for active TB, screening of high-risk groups and close contacts of TB patients and treating latent infections is a public health priority.

But many of these asymptomatic patients will get lost between a positive screen result and successful treatment completion, Dr. Zenner said.

“We have huge drop-offs in the cascade of treatment, and treatment completion is one of the worries,” he said. “Whether it makes a huge difference in compliance to take only 12 doses is not sufficiently studied, but it does make a lot of sense. By reducing the pill burden, as we call it, we think that we will see quite good adherence rates – but that’s a subject of further detailed study.”

The investigators noted as a limitation of their study that hepatotoxicity outcomes were not available for all studies and that some of the included trials had a potential for bias. They did not see statistically significant differences in treatment efficacy between regimens in HIV-positive and HIV-negative patients, but noted in their analysis that “efficacy may have been weaker in HIV-positive populations.”

The U.K. National Institute for Health Research provided some funding for Dr. Zenner and his colleagues’ study. One coauthor, Helen Stagg, PhD, reported nonfinancial support from Sanofi during the study, and financial support from Otsuka for unrelated work.


 

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FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

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Key clinical point: Rifamycin-only treatment of latent TB works as well as combination regimens, and shorter dosing schedules show no loss in efficacy vs. longer ones.

Major finding: Rifamycin-only regimens, rifampicin-isoniazid regimens of 3 or 4 months, rifampicin-pyrazinamide regimens were all effective, compared with placebo and with isoniazid regimens of 6, 12 and 72 months.

Data source: A network meta-analysis of 61 randomized trials, 8 of them published in last 3 years

Disclosures: The National Institute for Health Research (UK) funded some co-authors; one co-author disclosed a financial relationship with a pharmaceutical firm.

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VIDEO: Less follow-up proposed for low-risk thyroid cancer

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Tue, 07/21/2020 - 14:18

 

Many selected patients with low- or intermediate-risk differentiated thyroid cancer who have had excellent or good responses to their treatment may be able to safely transition to follow-up monitoring at longer intervals, Bryan R. Haugen, MD, suggested in a keynote lecture during the World Congress on Thyroid Cancer.

Traditionally, thyroid cancer specialists have monitored these patients for persistent or recurrent disease as often as every 6 or 12 months. “But what we’ve realized with recent assessments of response to treatment is that some patients do well without a recurrence over many years; so, the concept of doing less monitoring and less imaging, especially in patients with an excellent response [to their initial treatment], is being studied,” Dr. Haugen said in a video interview following his talk.

He estimated that perhaps two-thirds or as many as three-quarters of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer fall into the category of having low- or intermediate-risk disease with an excellent or good response to treatment, and hence they are potential candidates for eventually transitioning to less frequent follow-up.

During his talk, Dr. Haugen suggested that after several years with no sign of disease recurrence, lower-risk patients with an excellent treatment response may be able to stop undergoing regular monitoring, and those with a good treatment response may be able to safely have their monitoring intervals extended.

According to the most recent (2015) guidelines for differentiated thyroid cancer management from the American Thyroid Association, lower-risk patients with an excellent treatment response should have their serum thyroglobulin measured every 12-24 months and undergo an ultrasound examination every 3-5 years, while patients with a good response are targeted for serum thyroglobulin measurement annually with an ultrasound every 1-3 years (Thyroid. 2016 Jan;26[1]:1-133). Dr. Haugen chaired the expert panel that wrote these guidelines.

In another provocative suggestion, Dr. Haugen proposed that once well-responsive, lower-risk patients have remained disease free for several years, their less frequent follow-up monitoring could be continued by a primary care physician or another less specialized clinician.

At some time in the future, “a patient’s primary care physician could follow a simple tumor marker, thyroglobulin, maybe once every 5 years,” said Dr. Haugen, professor of medicine and head of the division of endocrinology, metabolism, and diabetes at the University of Colorado in Aurora. “At the University of Colorado, we use advanced-practice providers to do long-term follow-up” for lower-risk, treatment-responsive patients, he said.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

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Many selected patients with low- or intermediate-risk differentiated thyroid cancer who have had excellent or good responses to their treatment may be able to safely transition to follow-up monitoring at longer intervals, Bryan R. Haugen, MD, suggested in a keynote lecture during the World Congress on Thyroid Cancer.

Traditionally, thyroid cancer specialists have monitored these patients for persistent or recurrent disease as often as every 6 or 12 months. “But what we’ve realized with recent assessments of response to treatment is that some patients do well without a recurrence over many years; so, the concept of doing less monitoring and less imaging, especially in patients with an excellent response [to their initial treatment], is being studied,” Dr. Haugen said in a video interview following his talk.

He estimated that perhaps two-thirds or as many as three-quarters of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer fall into the category of having low- or intermediate-risk disease with an excellent or good response to treatment, and hence they are potential candidates for eventually transitioning to less frequent follow-up.

During his talk, Dr. Haugen suggested that after several years with no sign of disease recurrence, lower-risk patients with an excellent treatment response may be able to stop undergoing regular monitoring, and those with a good treatment response may be able to safely have their monitoring intervals extended.

According to the most recent (2015) guidelines for differentiated thyroid cancer management from the American Thyroid Association, lower-risk patients with an excellent treatment response should have their serum thyroglobulin measured every 12-24 months and undergo an ultrasound examination every 3-5 years, while patients with a good response are targeted for serum thyroglobulin measurement annually with an ultrasound every 1-3 years (Thyroid. 2016 Jan;26[1]:1-133). Dr. Haugen chaired the expert panel that wrote these guidelines.

In another provocative suggestion, Dr. Haugen proposed that once well-responsive, lower-risk patients have remained disease free for several years, their less frequent follow-up monitoring could be continued by a primary care physician or another less specialized clinician.

At some time in the future, “a patient’s primary care physician could follow a simple tumor marker, thyroglobulin, maybe once every 5 years,” said Dr. Haugen, professor of medicine and head of the division of endocrinology, metabolism, and diabetes at the University of Colorado in Aurora. “At the University of Colorado, we use advanced-practice providers to do long-term follow-up” for lower-risk, treatment-responsive patients, he said.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @mitchelzoler

 

Many selected patients with low- or intermediate-risk differentiated thyroid cancer who have had excellent or good responses to their treatment may be able to safely transition to follow-up monitoring at longer intervals, Bryan R. Haugen, MD, suggested in a keynote lecture during the World Congress on Thyroid Cancer.

Traditionally, thyroid cancer specialists have monitored these patients for persistent or recurrent disease as often as every 6 or 12 months. “But what we’ve realized with recent assessments of response to treatment is that some patients do well without a recurrence over many years; so, the concept of doing less monitoring and less imaging, especially in patients with an excellent response [to their initial treatment], is being studied,” Dr. Haugen said in a video interview following his talk.

He estimated that perhaps two-thirds or as many as three-quarters of patients with differentiated thyroid cancer fall into the category of having low- or intermediate-risk disease with an excellent or good response to treatment, and hence they are potential candidates for eventually transitioning to less frequent follow-up.

During his talk, Dr. Haugen suggested that after several years with no sign of disease recurrence, lower-risk patients with an excellent treatment response may be able to stop undergoing regular monitoring, and those with a good treatment response may be able to safely have their monitoring intervals extended.

According to the most recent (2015) guidelines for differentiated thyroid cancer management from the American Thyroid Association, lower-risk patients with an excellent treatment response should have their serum thyroglobulin measured every 12-24 months and undergo an ultrasound examination every 3-5 years, while patients with a good response are targeted for serum thyroglobulin measurement annually with an ultrasound every 1-3 years (Thyroid. 2016 Jan;26[1]:1-133). Dr. Haugen chaired the expert panel that wrote these guidelines.

In another provocative suggestion, Dr. Haugen proposed that once well-responsive, lower-risk patients have remained disease free for several years, their less frequent follow-up monitoring could be continued by a primary care physician or another less specialized clinician.

At some time in the future, “a patient’s primary care physician could follow a simple tumor marker, thyroglobulin, maybe once every 5 years,” said Dr. Haugen, professor of medicine and head of the division of endocrinology, metabolism, and diabetes at the University of Colorado in Aurora. “At the University of Colorado, we use advanced-practice providers to do long-term follow-up” for lower-risk, treatment-responsive patients, he said.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel
mzoler@frontlinemedcom.com

On Twitter @mitchelzoler
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New cryoballoon treatment eradicated esophageal squamous cell neoplasias

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Wed, 05/26/2021 - 13:52

 

For the first time, endoscopists have used focal cryoballoon ablation to eradicate early esophageal squamous cell neoplasias, including high-grade lesions in treatment-experienced patients.

A single session of treatment with the novel, portable nitrous oxide system (C2 Therapeutics, Redwood City, Calif.) produced complete pathologic and endoscopic responses at 3 months in 8 of 10 patients, reported Marcia Irene Canto, MD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, with her associates. Two to five sessions produced complete responses in the other two patients, and all patients were disease-free at their last visit (median follow-up, 10.7 months; interquartile range, 4-14 months). The study was published online July 15 in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (2017. doi: 10.1016/j.gie.2017.07.013).

Barrett's esophagus
©Nephron/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0/No changes
There were no serious adverse events, but two patients developed strictures, Dr. Canto reported with her associates at Columbia University Medical Center (New York), Alleghany Health Network (Pittsburgh), and Amsterdam Medical Center (The Netherlands). Balloon dilation resolved both cases of stricture. “Our initial experience suggests that efficacy is high and safety profile is reasonable,” the researchers wrote. “Prospective trials are needed to optimize cryogen dosimetry and assess safety and efficacy.

Standard treatments for esophageal squamous cell neoplasia have drawbacks. Submucosal dissection can cause bleeding, perforation, and stenosis, and radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is associated with stricture. To test an alternative, the researchers used a portable, hand-held, battery-powered cryoballoon ablation system that successfully eradicated Barrett’s esophagus lesions in two prior studies. The machine contains liquid nitrous oxide, which turns to gas when released into a balloon catheter in the endoscope. The gas inflates the balloon, enabling the endoscopist to see through it to the neoplastic mucosa, which is pretreated with Lugol chromoendoscopy. The endoscopist then cryoablates the target lesion across the balloon wall. Unlike cryospray, the entire dose of cryogen hits the lesion, the investigators noted. Also, the gas is automatically evacuated without the need for suctioning or decompression, and the treatment process does not require heavy gas tanks or repeated freeze-thaw cycles.

In this study, all 10 patients achieved complete endoscopic and pathologic responses at 3 months. Seven patients were followed for 1 year, and none showed biopsy evidence of neoplastic progression. In contrast, a prospective trial of circumferential radiofrequency ablation without endoscopic mucosal resection or endoscopic submucosal dissection reported a 12-month rate of complete response of 84%, the researchers noted (Endoscopy. 2015;47:398-408). There were no serious treatment-related adverse events. Pain was usually self-limited, although one patient required 2 days of narcotics. Two patients developed symptomatic strictures 6-8 weeks after treatment that resolved with balloon dilation. Both of these patients had undergone extensive multifocal ablation. “Circumferential treatment of ESCN [esophageal squamous cell neoplasia] remains problematic for all endoscopic ablative therapies, with a high stricture rate of 20% in our small pilot study of cryoablation and 20%-23% with RFA,” the investigators wrote. “The risk for postablation stricture appears to be related to a long length of ESCN. Optimizing the cryogen dose, technique, and decrease in Lugol’s solution concentration might alter the incidence of postablation strictures for ablative treatments.”

Study participants were 55-90 years old, and six were female. Four were treatment naive, and six had progressed despite endoscopic mucosal resection, RFA, spray cryotherapy, argon plasma coagulation, or multiple therapies. Seven patients had high-grade lesions, two had low-grade lesions, and one had early esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Most lesions were distally located, but two were in the middle esophagus and one was proximal. The largest lesion measured 4 cm and the maximum length of all lesions in a single patient was 10 cm. Patients did not have visible esophageal masses or evidence of advanced or metastatic disease.

“Comparative effectiveness trials might eventually determine the role of cryoablation in the treatment of early ESCN,” the researchers concluded. An open-label, nonrandomized clinical trial of the balloon cryotherapy device is underway in China (NCT02605759). The article did not list funding sources or disclosures.

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For the first time, endoscopists have used focal cryoballoon ablation to eradicate early esophageal squamous cell neoplasias, including high-grade lesions in treatment-experienced patients.

A single session of treatment with the novel, portable nitrous oxide system (C2 Therapeutics, Redwood City, Calif.) produced complete pathologic and endoscopic responses at 3 months in 8 of 10 patients, reported Marcia Irene Canto, MD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, with her associates. Two to five sessions produced complete responses in the other two patients, and all patients were disease-free at their last visit (median follow-up, 10.7 months; interquartile range, 4-14 months). The study was published online July 15 in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (2017. doi: 10.1016/j.gie.2017.07.013).

Barrett's esophagus
©Nephron/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0/No changes
There were no serious adverse events, but two patients developed strictures, Dr. Canto reported with her associates at Columbia University Medical Center (New York), Alleghany Health Network (Pittsburgh), and Amsterdam Medical Center (The Netherlands). Balloon dilation resolved both cases of stricture. “Our initial experience suggests that efficacy is high and safety profile is reasonable,” the researchers wrote. “Prospective trials are needed to optimize cryogen dosimetry and assess safety and efficacy.

Standard treatments for esophageal squamous cell neoplasia have drawbacks. Submucosal dissection can cause bleeding, perforation, and stenosis, and radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is associated with stricture. To test an alternative, the researchers used a portable, hand-held, battery-powered cryoballoon ablation system that successfully eradicated Barrett’s esophagus lesions in two prior studies. The machine contains liquid nitrous oxide, which turns to gas when released into a balloon catheter in the endoscope. The gas inflates the balloon, enabling the endoscopist to see through it to the neoplastic mucosa, which is pretreated with Lugol chromoendoscopy. The endoscopist then cryoablates the target lesion across the balloon wall. Unlike cryospray, the entire dose of cryogen hits the lesion, the investigators noted. Also, the gas is automatically evacuated without the need for suctioning or decompression, and the treatment process does not require heavy gas tanks or repeated freeze-thaw cycles.

In this study, all 10 patients achieved complete endoscopic and pathologic responses at 3 months. Seven patients were followed for 1 year, and none showed biopsy evidence of neoplastic progression. In contrast, a prospective trial of circumferential radiofrequency ablation without endoscopic mucosal resection or endoscopic submucosal dissection reported a 12-month rate of complete response of 84%, the researchers noted (Endoscopy. 2015;47:398-408). There were no serious treatment-related adverse events. Pain was usually self-limited, although one patient required 2 days of narcotics. Two patients developed symptomatic strictures 6-8 weeks after treatment that resolved with balloon dilation. Both of these patients had undergone extensive multifocal ablation. “Circumferential treatment of ESCN [esophageal squamous cell neoplasia] remains problematic for all endoscopic ablative therapies, with a high stricture rate of 20% in our small pilot study of cryoablation and 20%-23% with RFA,” the investigators wrote. “The risk for postablation stricture appears to be related to a long length of ESCN. Optimizing the cryogen dose, technique, and decrease in Lugol’s solution concentration might alter the incidence of postablation strictures for ablative treatments.”

Study participants were 55-90 years old, and six were female. Four were treatment naive, and six had progressed despite endoscopic mucosal resection, RFA, spray cryotherapy, argon plasma coagulation, or multiple therapies. Seven patients had high-grade lesions, two had low-grade lesions, and one had early esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Most lesions were distally located, but two were in the middle esophagus and one was proximal. The largest lesion measured 4 cm and the maximum length of all lesions in a single patient was 10 cm. Patients did not have visible esophageal masses or evidence of advanced or metastatic disease.

“Comparative effectiveness trials might eventually determine the role of cryoablation in the treatment of early ESCN,” the researchers concluded. An open-label, nonrandomized clinical trial of the balloon cryotherapy device is underway in China (NCT02605759). The article did not list funding sources or disclosures.

 

For the first time, endoscopists have used focal cryoballoon ablation to eradicate early esophageal squamous cell neoplasias, including high-grade lesions in treatment-experienced patients.

A single session of treatment with the novel, portable nitrous oxide system (C2 Therapeutics, Redwood City, Calif.) produced complete pathologic and endoscopic responses at 3 months in 8 of 10 patients, reported Marcia Irene Canto, MD, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, with her associates. Two to five sessions produced complete responses in the other two patients, and all patients were disease-free at their last visit (median follow-up, 10.7 months; interquartile range, 4-14 months). The study was published online July 15 in Gastrointestinal Endoscopy (2017. doi: 10.1016/j.gie.2017.07.013).

Barrett's esophagus
©Nephron/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0/No changes
There were no serious adverse events, but two patients developed strictures, Dr. Canto reported with her associates at Columbia University Medical Center (New York), Alleghany Health Network (Pittsburgh), and Amsterdam Medical Center (The Netherlands). Balloon dilation resolved both cases of stricture. “Our initial experience suggests that efficacy is high and safety profile is reasonable,” the researchers wrote. “Prospective trials are needed to optimize cryogen dosimetry and assess safety and efficacy.

Standard treatments for esophageal squamous cell neoplasia have drawbacks. Submucosal dissection can cause bleeding, perforation, and stenosis, and radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is associated with stricture. To test an alternative, the researchers used a portable, hand-held, battery-powered cryoballoon ablation system that successfully eradicated Barrett’s esophagus lesions in two prior studies. The machine contains liquid nitrous oxide, which turns to gas when released into a balloon catheter in the endoscope. The gas inflates the balloon, enabling the endoscopist to see through it to the neoplastic mucosa, which is pretreated with Lugol chromoendoscopy. The endoscopist then cryoablates the target lesion across the balloon wall. Unlike cryospray, the entire dose of cryogen hits the lesion, the investigators noted. Also, the gas is automatically evacuated without the need for suctioning or decompression, and the treatment process does not require heavy gas tanks or repeated freeze-thaw cycles.

In this study, all 10 patients achieved complete endoscopic and pathologic responses at 3 months. Seven patients were followed for 1 year, and none showed biopsy evidence of neoplastic progression. In contrast, a prospective trial of circumferential radiofrequency ablation without endoscopic mucosal resection or endoscopic submucosal dissection reported a 12-month rate of complete response of 84%, the researchers noted (Endoscopy. 2015;47:398-408). There were no serious treatment-related adverse events. Pain was usually self-limited, although one patient required 2 days of narcotics. Two patients developed symptomatic strictures 6-8 weeks after treatment that resolved with balloon dilation. Both of these patients had undergone extensive multifocal ablation. “Circumferential treatment of ESCN [esophageal squamous cell neoplasia] remains problematic for all endoscopic ablative therapies, with a high stricture rate of 20% in our small pilot study of cryoablation and 20%-23% with RFA,” the investigators wrote. “The risk for postablation stricture appears to be related to a long length of ESCN. Optimizing the cryogen dose, technique, and decrease in Lugol’s solution concentration might alter the incidence of postablation strictures for ablative treatments.”

Study participants were 55-90 years old, and six were female. Four were treatment naive, and six had progressed despite endoscopic mucosal resection, RFA, spray cryotherapy, argon plasma coagulation, or multiple therapies. Seven patients had high-grade lesions, two had low-grade lesions, and one had early esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Most lesions were distally located, but two were in the middle esophagus and one was proximal. The largest lesion measured 4 cm and the maximum length of all lesions in a single patient was 10 cm. Patients did not have visible esophageal masses or evidence of advanced or metastatic disease.

“Comparative effectiveness trials might eventually determine the role of cryoablation in the treatment of early ESCN,” the researchers concluded. An open-label, nonrandomized clinical trial of the balloon cryotherapy device is underway in China (NCT02605759). The article did not list funding sources or disclosures.

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Key clinical point: In a first-in-kind study, endoscopists used focal cryoballoon ablation to eradicate early esophageal squamous cell neoplasias.

Major finding: All 10 patients had a complete response at 3 months. All remained disease free at last follow-up (median, 10.7 months).

Data source: A multicenter study of 10 patients with early high-grade or low-grade esophageal squamous cell neoplasias or early squamous cell carcinomas.

Disclosures: The article did not list funding sources or disclosures.

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New trial shows thymectomy benefits myasthenia gravis

More questions on the table
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Mon, 01/07/2019 - 12:57

 

The effectiveness of thymectomy as a cure for myasthenia gravis has long been debated, but the publication of Myasthenia Gravis Thymectomy Treatment (MGTX) trial results, showing that thymectomy improved outcomes over 3 years in patients with nonthymomatous myasthenia gravis, has gone a long way toward settling the debate, Joshua R. Sonett, MD, and his coauthors noted in a feature expert opinion (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:306-9).

Dr. Joshua R. Sonett of Columbia University Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital
Dr. Joshua R. Sonett
“The results of this study unequivocally prove that extended transsternal thymectomy improves clinical outcomes of patients with generalized MG,” wrote Dr. Sonett of Columbia University Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, and his coauthors. “Patients who were randomized to transsternal thymectomy had significantly improved symptoms of MG.”

Those markers include an average quantitative myasthenia score of 6.15 for the thymectomy group vs. 8.99 for the medical therapy group (P less than .0001); a lower dose of prednisone to attain improved neurologic status (44 mg vs. 60 mg; P less than .001); time-weighted average score on the Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living scale (2.24 vs. 3.41; P = .008); azathioprine use (17% vs. 48%; P less than .001); percentage of patients who had minimal-manifestation status at month 36 (67% vs. 47%; P = .03); and hospitalization for myasthenia-related symptoms (9% vs. 37%). “Interestingly,” the researchers wrote, “despite these quantitative results, no difference was seen in the quality of life measured surveys.”

An ancillary study, Bio-MGTX, was performed simultaneously to investigate pathologic and serum markers. “Many questions still need to be answered in regard to the role of thymectomy in MG,” Dr. Sonett and his coauthors maintained. They include an analysis of radiologic predictors of success with thymectomy, and the role of thymectomy in seronegative MG, ocular MG and elderly patients.

“Future studies may be directed at achieving a more rapid and consistent time to a complete symptom response,” they said.

The MGTX trial does support the use of high-dose prednisone induction combined with thymectomy to achieve higher complete early remission rates, but Bio-MGTX data may help to refine induction protocols. “The debate will likely continue in regard to widespread adoption of extended transsternal maximal thymectomy,” the researchers wrote. “What was categorically measured in this trial was the effect of maximal thymectomy, as sternotomy offers no particular independent therapeutic benefit.”

The structure of the MGTX trial despite its small cohort (126) “enabled the medical and surgical community to definitively answer an important question,” they noted. Nonetheless, further investigation of the role of thymectomy in MG is “sorely needed.”

Patients may need up to 3 years to achieve an optimal response, and complete cure in a shorter time frame should be the goal for each patient. Multimodal therapy should be the basis of MG treatment. “Continued progress in the management of MG will require diligent, multidisciplinary teams designing and completing prospective studies like the MGTX,” the researchers wrote.

Dr. Sonett and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose. The MGTX trial was funded by the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. There was no commercial support for the trial.

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In the MGTX trial, patients in the thymectomy group still needed a high average dose of prednisone, and the rates of remission may decrease over time, Michael K. Hsin, MD, of Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong, wrote in his invited commentary (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:310-1). But he added that the trial did finally answer in a positive manner whether thymectomy could serve a beneficial role.

He also noted that the MGTX trial left at least four questions unanswered:

• The long-term effect of thymectomy on MG status with regard to future relapse.

• The role of surgery in the era of advances in medical treatment, including azathioprine to reduce the prednisone dose and emergence of stem-cell transplantation.

• The extent to which MGTX findings can be applied to acetylcholine receptor-negative pediatric patients.

• Whether alternative techniques to extended transsternal thymectomy can achieve comparable results.

Dr. Hsin had no financial relationships to disclose.

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In the MGTX trial, patients in the thymectomy group still needed a high average dose of prednisone, and the rates of remission may decrease over time, Michael K. Hsin, MD, of Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong, wrote in his invited commentary (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:310-1). But he added that the trial did finally answer in a positive manner whether thymectomy could serve a beneficial role.

He also noted that the MGTX trial left at least four questions unanswered:

• The long-term effect of thymectomy on MG status with regard to future relapse.

• The role of surgery in the era of advances in medical treatment, including azathioprine to reduce the prednisone dose and emergence of stem-cell transplantation.

• The extent to which MGTX findings can be applied to acetylcholine receptor-negative pediatric patients.

• Whether alternative techniques to extended transsternal thymectomy can achieve comparable results.

Dr. Hsin had no financial relationships to disclose.

Body

 

In the MGTX trial, patients in the thymectomy group still needed a high average dose of prednisone, and the rates of remission may decrease over time, Michael K. Hsin, MD, of Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong, wrote in his invited commentary (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:310-1). But he added that the trial did finally answer in a positive manner whether thymectomy could serve a beneficial role.

He also noted that the MGTX trial left at least four questions unanswered:

• The long-term effect of thymectomy on MG status with regard to future relapse.

• The role of surgery in the era of advances in medical treatment, including azathioprine to reduce the prednisone dose and emergence of stem-cell transplantation.

• The extent to which MGTX findings can be applied to acetylcholine receptor-negative pediatric patients.

• Whether alternative techniques to extended transsternal thymectomy can achieve comparable results.

Dr. Hsin had no financial relationships to disclose.

Title
More questions on the table
More questions on the table

 

The effectiveness of thymectomy as a cure for myasthenia gravis has long been debated, but the publication of Myasthenia Gravis Thymectomy Treatment (MGTX) trial results, showing that thymectomy improved outcomes over 3 years in patients with nonthymomatous myasthenia gravis, has gone a long way toward settling the debate, Joshua R. Sonett, MD, and his coauthors noted in a feature expert opinion (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:306-9).

Dr. Joshua R. Sonett of Columbia University Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital
Dr. Joshua R. Sonett
“The results of this study unequivocally prove that extended transsternal thymectomy improves clinical outcomes of patients with generalized MG,” wrote Dr. Sonett of Columbia University Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, and his coauthors. “Patients who were randomized to transsternal thymectomy had significantly improved symptoms of MG.”

Those markers include an average quantitative myasthenia score of 6.15 for the thymectomy group vs. 8.99 for the medical therapy group (P less than .0001); a lower dose of prednisone to attain improved neurologic status (44 mg vs. 60 mg; P less than .001); time-weighted average score on the Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living scale (2.24 vs. 3.41; P = .008); azathioprine use (17% vs. 48%; P less than .001); percentage of patients who had minimal-manifestation status at month 36 (67% vs. 47%; P = .03); and hospitalization for myasthenia-related symptoms (9% vs. 37%). “Interestingly,” the researchers wrote, “despite these quantitative results, no difference was seen in the quality of life measured surveys.”

An ancillary study, Bio-MGTX, was performed simultaneously to investigate pathologic and serum markers. “Many questions still need to be answered in regard to the role of thymectomy in MG,” Dr. Sonett and his coauthors maintained. They include an analysis of radiologic predictors of success with thymectomy, and the role of thymectomy in seronegative MG, ocular MG and elderly patients.

“Future studies may be directed at achieving a more rapid and consistent time to a complete symptom response,” they said.

The MGTX trial does support the use of high-dose prednisone induction combined with thymectomy to achieve higher complete early remission rates, but Bio-MGTX data may help to refine induction protocols. “The debate will likely continue in regard to widespread adoption of extended transsternal maximal thymectomy,” the researchers wrote. “What was categorically measured in this trial was the effect of maximal thymectomy, as sternotomy offers no particular independent therapeutic benefit.”

The structure of the MGTX trial despite its small cohort (126) “enabled the medical and surgical community to definitively answer an important question,” they noted. Nonetheless, further investigation of the role of thymectomy in MG is “sorely needed.”

Patients may need up to 3 years to achieve an optimal response, and complete cure in a shorter time frame should be the goal for each patient. Multimodal therapy should be the basis of MG treatment. “Continued progress in the management of MG will require diligent, multidisciplinary teams designing and completing prospective studies like the MGTX,” the researchers wrote.

Dr. Sonett and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose. The MGTX trial was funded by the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. There was no commercial support for the trial.

 

The effectiveness of thymectomy as a cure for myasthenia gravis has long been debated, but the publication of Myasthenia Gravis Thymectomy Treatment (MGTX) trial results, showing that thymectomy improved outcomes over 3 years in patients with nonthymomatous myasthenia gravis, has gone a long way toward settling the debate, Joshua R. Sonett, MD, and his coauthors noted in a feature expert opinion (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:306-9).

Dr. Joshua R. Sonett of Columbia University Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital
Dr. Joshua R. Sonett
“The results of this study unequivocally prove that extended transsternal thymectomy improves clinical outcomes of patients with generalized MG,” wrote Dr. Sonett of Columbia University Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, and his coauthors. “Patients who were randomized to transsternal thymectomy had significantly improved symptoms of MG.”

Those markers include an average quantitative myasthenia score of 6.15 for the thymectomy group vs. 8.99 for the medical therapy group (P less than .0001); a lower dose of prednisone to attain improved neurologic status (44 mg vs. 60 mg; P less than .001); time-weighted average score on the Myasthenia Gravis Activities of Daily Living scale (2.24 vs. 3.41; P = .008); azathioprine use (17% vs. 48%; P less than .001); percentage of patients who had minimal-manifestation status at month 36 (67% vs. 47%; P = .03); and hospitalization for myasthenia-related symptoms (9% vs. 37%). “Interestingly,” the researchers wrote, “despite these quantitative results, no difference was seen in the quality of life measured surveys.”

An ancillary study, Bio-MGTX, was performed simultaneously to investigate pathologic and serum markers. “Many questions still need to be answered in regard to the role of thymectomy in MG,” Dr. Sonett and his coauthors maintained. They include an analysis of radiologic predictors of success with thymectomy, and the role of thymectomy in seronegative MG, ocular MG and elderly patients.

“Future studies may be directed at achieving a more rapid and consistent time to a complete symptom response,” they said.

The MGTX trial does support the use of high-dose prednisone induction combined with thymectomy to achieve higher complete early remission rates, but Bio-MGTX data may help to refine induction protocols. “The debate will likely continue in regard to widespread adoption of extended transsternal maximal thymectomy,” the researchers wrote. “What was categorically measured in this trial was the effect of maximal thymectomy, as sternotomy offers no particular independent therapeutic benefit.”

The structure of the MGTX trial despite its small cohort (126) “enabled the medical and surgical community to definitively answer an important question,” they noted. Nonetheless, further investigation of the role of thymectomy in MG is “sorely needed.”

Patients may need up to 3 years to achieve an optimal response, and complete cure in a shorter time frame should be the goal for each patient. Multimodal therapy should be the basis of MG treatment. “Continued progress in the management of MG will require diligent, multidisciplinary teams designing and completing prospective studies like the MGTX,” the researchers wrote.

Dr. Sonett and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose. The MGTX trial was funded by the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. There was no commercial support for the trial.

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FROM THE JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY

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Key clinical point: A recently published prospective randomized trial provides definitive evidence that thymectomy significantly improves outcomes of patients with myasthenia gravis.

Major finding: Patients who underwent thymectomy had an average quantitative myasthenia score of 6.15 vs. 8.99 for the medical therapy group, a significant difference.

Data source: Myasthenia Gravis Thymectomy Trial, a prospective trial of 126 patients randomized to thymectomy with medical therapy or medical therapy alone.

Disclosures: Dr. Sonett and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose. The MGTX trial was funded by the U.S. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. There was no commercial support for the trial.

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Pulmonary metastasectomy may be useful for soft-tissue sarcoma spread

An aid in better patient selection
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The rate of soft-tissue sarcoma has nearly doubled over the past two decades, and up to 50% of patients with tissue sarcoma develop lung metastasis. A single-center study of 539 patients who had treatment for soft-tissue sarcoma has revealed disease and treatment characteristics that may aid patient selection and help predict overall and disease-free survival after diagnosis and treatment.

“Histologic subtype and size of the primary tumor were significantly associated with overall survival,” said lead author Neel P. Chudgar, MD, and his coauthors in the July issue of the Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (2017;154:319-30).

“Patients who underwent pulmonary metastasectomy [PM] for pleomorphic sarcoma/malignant fibrous histocytoma had the shortest median overall survival (23.6 months), whereas those who underwent PM for leiomyosarcoma had a median overall survival of 42 months,” he said.

The study subjects had pulmonary metastasectomies at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, during September 1991–June 2014. The median overall survival was 33.2 months, and median disease-free survival was 6.8 months for the entire cohort.

Among the disease characteristics associated with a lower hazard ratio of death shown by multivariable analyses were leiomyosarcoma histologic subtype (HR, 0.57), primary tumor size of 10 cm or less (HR, 1.00 vs. HR, 1.37 for those greater than 10 cm), increasing time from primary tumor resection to development of metastases (HR, 0.4 at less than 24 months vs. 1.0 at less than 6 months), solitary lung metastasis (HR, 1.0 vs. 1.8 for one year or more), and minimally invasive resection (HR, 0.71), all of which were statistically significant differences. Disease-free interval of more than one year and one pulmonary metastasis were significantly associated with lower hazard of disease recurrence.

Of patients, 70% had pulmonary metastasectomy as their primary treatment. The remainder had induction chemotherapy. In addition, 71% had open procedures over the 23-year study period, but minimally invasive operations became more common with time, increasing more than fourfold from the first half of the study period, vs. the last. They accounted for more than half of all procedures in the last five years of the study.

With regard to tumor type, fibrosarcoma was associated with longest median overall survival (65.2 months). Dr. Chudgar and his colleagues noted that 43% of these patients had low-grade primary tumors. Patients with low-grade tumors of all types had a median overall survival of 71.8 months, vs. 30.8 months for those with high-grade tumors.

“Our results indicate that therapeutic-intent pulmonary metastasectomy for soft-tissue sarcoma can be associated with prolonged survival,” Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors said. “The median survivals in our study are comparable with those in previous studies.” However, their analysis went beyond previous studies because they identified positive prognostic factors.

Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors acknowledge that various studies have drawn conflicting conclusions about the validity of histologic subtype as a prognostic factor, but their study differs from previous studies because it is a single-center cohort, “which increases the power to potentially identify significant differences, and we focused on soft-tissue sarcoma exclusively to enhance the homogeneity of the study population.”

Nonetheless, the researchers noted some limitations of their study, namely their collective analysis of the various soft-tissue sarcoma subtypes and the lack of a control group. Soft tissue sarcoma, because of its heterogeneous nature, challenges the adoption of precision medicine for this cancer type, but, until clinicians better understand the underlying mechanism of metastasis in these tumor types, Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors said, pulmonary metastasectomy “remains the best available treatment for soft tissue sarcoma pulmonary metastases.”

Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose.

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The findings that surgery for pulmonary metastases achieves “relatively good median survival” that Dr. Chudgar and coauthors reported are “especially impressive when considering that more than 25% of these patients with metastatic cancer had five or more pulmonary lesions,” said Mark F. Berry, MD, MHS, of Stanford University in his invited commentary (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:117-8).

Dr. Berry also said, however, that surgeons still must consider these results cautiously for several reasons. One, the study is retrospective and uncontrolled. Two, the study does not address whether the researchers selected healthy patients “with favorable disease characteristics” for pulmonary metastasectomy. “The sobering reality is that most patients still had recurrence relatively soon after complete pulmonary resection,” Dr. Berry said.

The study does support the current practice of pulmonary metastasectomy, which many patients may prefer for its invasive nature, compared with systemic chemotherapy treatment, he said. “Overall, surgeons can use this study to aid patient selection [and] to support the clinical decision to pursue resection of soft-tissue sarcoma pulmonary metastases for patients judged to be appropriate surgical candidates,” Dr. Berry concluded.

Dr. Berry had reported no financial disclosures.

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The findings that surgery for pulmonary metastases achieves “relatively good median survival” that Dr. Chudgar and coauthors reported are “especially impressive when considering that more than 25% of these patients with metastatic cancer had five or more pulmonary lesions,” said Mark F. Berry, MD, MHS, of Stanford University in his invited commentary (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:117-8).

Dr. Berry also said, however, that surgeons still must consider these results cautiously for several reasons. One, the study is retrospective and uncontrolled. Two, the study does not address whether the researchers selected healthy patients “with favorable disease characteristics” for pulmonary metastasectomy. “The sobering reality is that most patients still had recurrence relatively soon after complete pulmonary resection,” Dr. Berry said.

The study does support the current practice of pulmonary metastasectomy, which many patients may prefer for its invasive nature, compared with systemic chemotherapy treatment, he said. “Overall, surgeons can use this study to aid patient selection [and] to support the clinical decision to pursue resection of soft-tissue sarcoma pulmonary metastases for patients judged to be appropriate surgical candidates,” Dr. Berry concluded.

Dr. Berry had reported no financial disclosures.

Body

 

The findings that surgery for pulmonary metastases achieves “relatively good median survival” that Dr. Chudgar and coauthors reported are “especially impressive when considering that more than 25% of these patients with metastatic cancer had five or more pulmonary lesions,” said Mark F. Berry, MD, MHS, of Stanford University in his invited commentary (J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 2017;154:117-8).

Dr. Berry also said, however, that surgeons still must consider these results cautiously for several reasons. One, the study is retrospective and uncontrolled. Two, the study does not address whether the researchers selected healthy patients “with favorable disease characteristics” for pulmonary metastasectomy. “The sobering reality is that most patients still had recurrence relatively soon after complete pulmonary resection,” Dr. Berry said.

The study does support the current practice of pulmonary metastasectomy, which many patients may prefer for its invasive nature, compared with systemic chemotherapy treatment, he said. “Overall, surgeons can use this study to aid patient selection [and] to support the clinical decision to pursue resection of soft-tissue sarcoma pulmonary metastases for patients judged to be appropriate surgical candidates,” Dr. Berry concluded.

Dr. Berry had reported no financial disclosures.

Title
An aid in better patient selection
An aid in better patient selection

 

The rate of soft-tissue sarcoma has nearly doubled over the past two decades, and up to 50% of patients with tissue sarcoma develop lung metastasis. A single-center study of 539 patients who had treatment for soft-tissue sarcoma has revealed disease and treatment characteristics that may aid patient selection and help predict overall and disease-free survival after diagnosis and treatment.

“Histologic subtype and size of the primary tumor were significantly associated with overall survival,” said lead author Neel P. Chudgar, MD, and his coauthors in the July issue of the Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (2017;154:319-30).

“Patients who underwent pulmonary metastasectomy [PM] for pleomorphic sarcoma/malignant fibrous histocytoma had the shortest median overall survival (23.6 months), whereas those who underwent PM for leiomyosarcoma had a median overall survival of 42 months,” he said.

The study subjects had pulmonary metastasectomies at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, during September 1991–June 2014. The median overall survival was 33.2 months, and median disease-free survival was 6.8 months for the entire cohort.

Among the disease characteristics associated with a lower hazard ratio of death shown by multivariable analyses were leiomyosarcoma histologic subtype (HR, 0.57), primary tumor size of 10 cm or less (HR, 1.00 vs. HR, 1.37 for those greater than 10 cm), increasing time from primary tumor resection to development of metastases (HR, 0.4 at less than 24 months vs. 1.0 at less than 6 months), solitary lung metastasis (HR, 1.0 vs. 1.8 for one year or more), and minimally invasive resection (HR, 0.71), all of which were statistically significant differences. Disease-free interval of more than one year and one pulmonary metastasis were significantly associated with lower hazard of disease recurrence.

Of patients, 70% had pulmonary metastasectomy as their primary treatment. The remainder had induction chemotherapy. In addition, 71% had open procedures over the 23-year study period, but minimally invasive operations became more common with time, increasing more than fourfold from the first half of the study period, vs. the last. They accounted for more than half of all procedures in the last five years of the study.

With regard to tumor type, fibrosarcoma was associated with longest median overall survival (65.2 months). Dr. Chudgar and his colleagues noted that 43% of these patients had low-grade primary tumors. Patients with low-grade tumors of all types had a median overall survival of 71.8 months, vs. 30.8 months for those with high-grade tumors.

“Our results indicate that therapeutic-intent pulmonary metastasectomy for soft-tissue sarcoma can be associated with prolonged survival,” Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors said. “The median survivals in our study are comparable with those in previous studies.” However, their analysis went beyond previous studies because they identified positive prognostic factors.

Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors acknowledge that various studies have drawn conflicting conclusions about the validity of histologic subtype as a prognostic factor, but their study differs from previous studies because it is a single-center cohort, “which increases the power to potentially identify significant differences, and we focused on soft-tissue sarcoma exclusively to enhance the homogeneity of the study population.”

Nonetheless, the researchers noted some limitations of their study, namely their collective analysis of the various soft-tissue sarcoma subtypes and the lack of a control group. Soft tissue sarcoma, because of its heterogeneous nature, challenges the adoption of precision medicine for this cancer type, but, until clinicians better understand the underlying mechanism of metastasis in these tumor types, Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors said, pulmonary metastasectomy “remains the best available treatment for soft tissue sarcoma pulmonary metastases.”

Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose.

 

The rate of soft-tissue sarcoma has nearly doubled over the past two decades, and up to 50% of patients with tissue sarcoma develop lung metastasis. A single-center study of 539 patients who had treatment for soft-tissue sarcoma has revealed disease and treatment characteristics that may aid patient selection and help predict overall and disease-free survival after diagnosis and treatment.

“Histologic subtype and size of the primary tumor were significantly associated with overall survival,” said lead author Neel P. Chudgar, MD, and his coauthors in the July issue of the Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery (2017;154:319-30).

“Patients who underwent pulmonary metastasectomy [PM] for pleomorphic sarcoma/malignant fibrous histocytoma had the shortest median overall survival (23.6 months), whereas those who underwent PM for leiomyosarcoma had a median overall survival of 42 months,” he said.

The study subjects had pulmonary metastasectomies at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, during September 1991–June 2014. The median overall survival was 33.2 months, and median disease-free survival was 6.8 months for the entire cohort.

Among the disease characteristics associated with a lower hazard ratio of death shown by multivariable analyses were leiomyosarcoma histologic subtype (HR, 0.57), primary tumor size of 10 cm or less (HR, 1.00 vs. HR, 1.37 for those greater than 10 cm), increasing time from primary tumor resection to development of metastases (HR, 0.4 at less than 24 months vs. 1.0 at less than 6 months), solitary lung metastasis (HR, 1.0 vs. 1.8 for one year or more), and minimally invasive resection (HR, 0.71), all of which were statistically significant differences. Disease-free interval of more than one year and one pulmonary metastasis were significantly associated with lower hazard of disease recurrence.

Of patients, 70% had pulmonary metastasectomy as their primary treatment. The remainder had induction chemotherapy. In addition, 71% had open procedures over the 23-year study period, but minimally invasive operations became more common with time, increasing more than fourfold from the first half of the study period, vs. the last. They accounted for more than half of all procedures in the last five years of the study.

With regard to tumor type, fibrosarcoma was associated with longest median overall survival (65.2 months). Dr. Chudgar and his colleagues noted that 43% of these patients had low-grade primary tumors. Patients with low-grade tumors of all types had a median overall survival of 71.8 months, vs. 30.8 months for those with high-grade tumors.

“Our results indicate that therapeutic-intent pulmonary metastasectomy for soft-tissue sarcoma can be associated with prolonged survival,” Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors said. “The median survivals in our study are comparable with those in previous studies.” However, their analysis went beyond previous studies because they identified positive prognostic factors.

Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors acknowledge that various studies have drawn conflicting conclusions about the validity of histologic subtype as a prognostic factor, but their study differs from previous studies because it is a single-center cohort, “which increases the power to potentially identify significant differences, and we focused on soft-tissue sarcoma exclusively to enhance the homogeneity of the study population.”

Nonetheless, the researchers noted some limitations of their study, namely their collective analysis of the various soft-tissue sarcoma subtypes and the lack of a control group. Soft tissue sarcoma, because of its heterogeneous nature, challenges the adoption of precision medicine for this cancer type, but, until clinicians better understand the underlying mechanism of metastasis in these tumor types, Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors said, pulmonary metastasectomy “remains the best available treatment for soft tissue sarcoma pulmonary metastases.”

Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose.

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FROM THE JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY

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Key clinical point: Characteristics that determine survival in patients with sarcomatous pulmonary metastases are tumor subtype and size, number of and time to metastases, and minimally invasive surgery.

Major finding: Patients with leiomyosarcoma histologic subtype tumor had a hazard ratio of 0.57 (P = .001), and those with a primary tumor size of 10 cm or less had an HR of 1, vs. an HR of 1.37 for those greater than 10 cm (P = .006)

Data source: A single-institution study of 539 patients who had pulmonary mastectomy for metastatic soft tissue sarcoma from September 1991 to June 2014.

Disclosures: Dr. Chudgar and his coauthors had no financial relationships to disclose.

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Immune signature shows good prognostic performance in early-stage NSCLC

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Fri, 01/18/2019 - 16:55

 

A new tumor immune-related gene signature may help take the guesswork out of prognostication in patients with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), according to a retrospective cohort study.

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M. Patricia Rivera, MD, FCCP, comments: As lung cancer screening implementation increases, it is expected that the prevalence of early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) will increase.

Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
While surgical resection confers a good 5-year survival in early-stage NSCLC, the patients most likely to achieve long-term benefit are those with small tumors, T1a lesions.  
Currently, adjuvant therapy is reserved for patients with tumors greater than 4 cm or those with N1 disease. Having reliable biomarkers to identify patients at a high risk for recurrence after surgical resection is a significant clinical advantage in order to guide adjuvant therapy. The clinical-immune signature described in this study is an exciting and promising biomarker for estimating overall survival in NSCLC.

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M. Patricia Rivera, MD, FCCP, comments: As lung cancer screening implementation increases, it is expected that the prevalence of early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) will increase.

Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
While surgical resection confers a good 5-year survival in early-stage NSCLC, the patients most likely to achieve long-term benefit are those with small tumors, T1a lesions.  
Currently, adjuvant therapy is reserved for patients with tumors greater than 4 cm or those with N1 disease. Having reliable biomarkers to identify patients at a high risk for recurrence after surgical resection is a significant clinical advantage in order to guide adjuvant therapy. The clinical-immune signature described in this study is an exciting and promising biomarker for estimating overall survival in NSCLC.

Body

M. Patricia Rivera, MD, FCCP, comments: As lung cancer screening implementation increases, it is expected that the prevalence of early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) will increase.

Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
Dr. M. Patricia Rivera
While surgical resection confers a good 5-year survival in early-stage NSCLC, the patients most likely to achieve long-term benefit are those with small tumors, T1a lesions.  
Currently, adjuvant therapy is reserved for patients with tumors greater than 4 cm or those with N1 disease. Having reliable biomarkers to identify patients at a high risk for recurrence after surgical resection is a significant clinical advantage in order to guide adjuvant therapy. The clinical-immune signature described in this study is an exciting and promising biomarker for estimating overall survival in NSCLC.

 

A new tumor immune-related gene signature may help take the guesswork out of prognostication in patients with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), according to a retrospective cohort study.

 

A new tumor immune-related gene signature may help take the guesswork out of prognostication in patients with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), according to a retrospective cohort study.

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FROM JAMA ONCOLOGY

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Key clinical point: A new signature containing 40 immune-related genes predicts survival in patients with early-stage NSCLC.

Major finding: Compared with peers in the signature-defined low-risk group, patients in the signature-defined high-risk group had roughly twice the adjusted risk of death (hazard ratio range, 1.72-2.36).

Data source: A retrospective cohort study using frozen tumors from 2,414 patients with stage I or II nonsquamous NSCLC who underwent complete resection and did not receive adjuvant or neoadjuvant therapy.

Disclosures: The investigators reported that they had no relevant disclosures. The study was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health.

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