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Survival After Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy for Clinically Diagnosed or Biopsy-Proven Early-Stage NSCLC: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • SBRT is a potentially curative treatment for early-stage NSCLC, but its survival outcomes might vary based on whether the diagnosis is clinically or biopsy-proven.
  • The systematic review analyzed 43 studies, revealing that patients with biopsy-proven disease had lower 3-year overall survival and cancer-specific survival rates compared to those diagnosed clinically, although 5-year overall survival rates were similar for both groups.
  • The findings underline the significance of obtaining pathological confirmation of malignancy before treating with SBRT, as this could impact patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) is a promising curative treatment for early-stage NSCLC. It is unclear if survival outcomes for SBRT are influenced by a lack of pathological confirmation of malignancy and staging of disease in these patients. In this systematic review and meta-analysis, we assess survival outcomes after SBRT in studies with patients with clinically diagnosed versus biopsy-proven early-stage NSCLC.

Methods: The main databases were searched for trials and cohort studies without restrictions to publication status or language. Two independent researchers performed the screening and selection of eligible studies. Outcomes were overall survival, cancer-specific survival, and disease-free survival. The inverse variance method and the random effects method for meta-analysis were used to assess pooled survival estimates.

Results: A total of 11,195 nonduplicate records were identified by the original search strategy. After screening by title and abstract, 1051 potentially eligible records were identified. A total of 43 articles were included. The comparative studies showed lower 3-year overall survival and lower 2-year and 5-year cancer-specific survival for biopsy-proven disease compared to clinical disease. However, 5-year overall survival was the same for both groups. For the pooled estimates, 3-year disease-free survival and 2-year cancer-specific survival were lower for biopsied disease.

Conclusions: Results of this systematic review and meta-analysis show a discrepancy in oncological outcomes for patients undergoing SBRT for suspected early-stage NSCLC in whom there is pathologic conformation of malignancy and those who there is only a clinical diagnose of NSCLC. These results emphasize the importance of obtaining pathologic proof of malignancy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtho.2018.12.035DOI Listing

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