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C. Billiet



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    P3.09 - Mesothelioma (ID 725)

    • Event: WCLC 2017
    • Type: Poster Session with Presenters Present
    • Track: Mesothelioma
    • Presentations: 1
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      P3.09-003 - Heart Radiation Dose as a Risk Factor for Dyspnea Worsening After Multimodality Treatment for NSCLC and MPM: An Exploratory Analysis (ID 10496)

      09:30 - 09:30  |  Author(s): C. Billiet

      • Abstract

      Background:
      The purpose of our study was to quantify the influence of heart dose on the early and late onset of dyspnea in a cohort of non-small cancer (NSCLC) and malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) patients having multimodality treatment including radiotherapy (RT).

      Method:
      In 121 patients with multimodality-treated NSCLC and MPM the maximal dyspnea score (CTCAE 4.0) before RT, at an early (<6 months) and a late (7-12 months) time point were obtained. Included patients needed to be clinically and radiologically progression-free 9 months after the end of RT. The difference (Δ) between the maximal dyspnea at <6 months and at 7-12 months with the pre-RT dyspnea was calculated.

      Result:
      Forty-four percent (50/113) of the patients developed an early worsening of at least 1 point in their dyspnea score (Δdyspnea >1) after the end of RT. Independent predictors of an early worsening were the mean heart dose (MHD) (for Δdyspnea >1: OR=1.03, p=0.04) and the dyspnea score before RT (for Δdyspnea >1: OR=0.40, p=0.0001; for Δdyspnea >2: OR=0.35, p=0.05). At the later time point, only the dyspnea score before RT (OR: 0.40, p=0.001) was identified as predictor of Δdyspnea >1.

      Conclusion:
      Our results, albeit exploratory, suggest that heart dose may play a role in the early worsening of the dyspnea in a heterogeneous cohort of patients having multimodality treatment including RT, whereas baseline dyspnea plays a major role for both early and later worsening.