AI Article Synopsis

  • Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) progresses rapidly, with our study showing a median of 10 days from abnormal radiograph to diagnosis and 35 days to start treatment, suggesting that delays may worsen outcomes.
  • Emergency department visits led to quicker diagnoses (3 days) compared to clinic visits (21 days), hinting that faster intervention in emergencies might improve patient timing for treatment initiation.
  • Despite higher survival rates for patients with limited stage disease, factors like race, radiographic findings, and mode of presentation did not significantly influence diagnosis timing or overall survival, highlighting the aggressive nature of SCLC.

Article Abstract

Objectives: Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is the most rapidly progressive form of lung cancer, and delays in treatment may increase the tumor burden. We determined the time from abnormal radiograph to diagnosis and treatment for patients with SCLC and investigated the effect of emergent presentation, stage, radiographic findings, and race on these measures and survival.

Methods: Retrospective analysis of clinical data for 45 consecutive evaluable patients at a single institution diagnosed as having SCLC.

Results: Median time from first abnormal radiograph to tissue diagnosis was 10 days and time from first abnormal radiograph to initiation of treatment was 35 days. Emergency department presentation led to earlier diagnosis compared with the clinic (3 vs 21 days), with a trend toward earlier treatment (15 vs 39 days; P = 0.057). No significant effect of radiographic findings, disease stage, or race was observed from time to diagnosis or treatment. Forty-three patients (96%) died, with a median survival time from initial abnormal radiograph to death of 375 days. Survival was longer for patients with limited stage disease (619 vs 230 days), but it was not significantly affected by emergent presentation, radiographic findings, or race. Consistent with the aggressive behavior of SCLC, 10 patients (22%) had a normal radiograph within 6 months prediagnosis, and 7 of these had extensive disease.

Conclusions: The median time from abnormal radiograph to initiation of treatment for SCLC in our single-center study overlapped with the expected doubling time for this malignancy and likely allowed a preventable increase in tumor burden.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SMJ.0b013e3182601198DOI Listing

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