AI Article Synopsis

  • Survivors of head and neck cancer (HNC) are more likely to develop second primary lung cancer (SPLC), primarily due to smoking as a common risk factor.
  • * A study analyzed 100 HNC patients undergoing lung surgery and compared them to 200 matched patients without HNC, revealing significant differences in nutritional status and complications.
  • * Results showed that HNC patients faced more malnutrition, had higher surgery complication rates, and lower 5-year survival rates compared to the control group, indicating a need for specialized care in this high-risk population.

Article Abstract

Background: In survivors of head and neck cancer (HNC), second primary lung cancer (SPLC) often develop as a result of a common risk factor, that is, smoking. A multicenter experience was reviewed to evaluate how the history of a diagnosis of HNC affects the outcomes of patients undergoing pulmonary resection for SPLC.

Methods: A multicenter retrospective analysis of patients hospitalized between January 2012 and December 2018 was performed. From a cohort of 4521 patients undergoing therapeutic pulmonary resection for primary non-small cell lung cancer, 100 patients with a previous history of HNC (HNC group) were identified. These patients were compared with a control group consisting of 200 patients without an HNC history from the same cohort pair-matched with operating facility, age, sex, and pathologic stage of lung cancer.

Results: At the time of surgery for SPLC, the HNC group showed malnutrition with a lower prognostic nutritional index compared with the control group (P < .001). The HNC group was determined to have postoperative complications more frequently (P = .02). The 5-year overall survival rates in the HNC and control groups were 59.0% and 83.2%, respectively (P < .001). Statistically, HNC history, lower prognostic nutritional index, squamous cell lung cancer, and TNM stage were identified to be independently associated with poor survival.

Conclusions: Patients with SPLC after primary HNC often present with malnutrition and are predisposed to postoperative complications and poor survival after pulmonary resection.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2022.04.052DOI Listing

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