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O. Peña-Curiel
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ORAL 30 - Community Practice (ID 141)
- Event: WCLC 2015
- Type: Oral Session
- Track: Community Practice
- Presentations: 1
- Moderators:P.S.S. Kho, R. Jotte
- Coordinates: 9/08/2015, 16:45 - 18:15, Mile High Ballroom 2c-3c
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ORAL30.07 - Different Mutation Profiles and Clinical Characteristics Among Hispanic Patients with NSCLC Could Explain The 'Hispanic Paradox' (ID 748)
17:50 - 18:01 | Author(s): O. Peña-Curiel
- Abstract
- Presentation
Background:
Sixteen percent of the U.S. population is Hispanic, predominantly of Mexican ancestry. Recently, two independent American reports demonstrated a higher overall survival (OS) in Hispanic populations compared with non-Hispanic-white populations (NHW) in patients with non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) diagnosis. The latter even when most of the Hispanics are diagnosed at advanced stages of disease and are low-income patients. The aim of our study was to analyze the clinical, pathological, and molecular characteristics as well as the outcomes in a cohort of NSCLC Hispanic patients from the National Cancer Institute of Mexico that could explain this "Hispanic Paradox".
Methods:
A cohort of 1260 consecutive NSCLC patients treated at the National Cancer Institute of Mexico from 2007-2014 was analyzed. Their clinical- pathological characteristics, the mutation-status of EGFR and KRAS and the prognosis were evaluated.
Results:
Patients presented with stages of disease: II (0.6%), IIIa (4.8%), IIIb (18.4%) and IV (76.3%). NSCLC was associated with smoking in 56.5% of the patients (76.7% of male vs. 33.0% of female patients). Wood smoke exposure (WSE) was associated with 37.2% of the cases (27.3% in men vs. 48.8% in women). The frequency of EGFR mutations was 28.1% (18.5% in males vs. 36.9% in females, p<0.001) and the frequency for KRAS mutations was 10.2% (10.3% men vs. 10.1% in women p= 0.939). The median OS for all patients was 23.0 months [CI95% 19.4-26.2], whereas for patients at stage IV, it was 20.1 months [CI 95% 16.5-23.7]. The independent factors associated with the OS were as follows, the ECOG Performance Status, stage of disease, EGFR and KRAS mutation status.
Conclusion:
The high frequency of EGFR mutations and low frequency of KRAS mutations in Hispanic populations and different prevalence in lung cancer-related-developing risk factors compared with Caucasian populations, such as the lower frequency of smoking exposure and higher WSE, particularly in women, might explain the prognosis differences between foreign-born-Hispanics, US-born-Hispanics and NHWs.
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