More frequent surveillance following lung cancer resection is not associated with improved survival: A nationally representative cohort study Conference Paper


Authors: McMurry, T. L.; Stukenborg, G. J.; Kessler, L. G.; Colditz, G. A.; Wong, M. L.; Francescatti, A. B.; Jones, D. R.; Schumacher, J. R.; Greenberg, C. C.; Chang, G. J.; Winchester, D. P.; McKellar, D. P.; Kozower, B. D.
Title: More frequent surveillance following lung cancer resection is not associated with improved survival: A nationally representative cohort study
Conference Title: 138th Annual Meeting of the American Surgical Association (ASA)
Abstract: Objective: To evaluate whether an association exists between the intensity of surveillance following surgical resection for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and survival. Background: Surveillance guidelines following surgical resection of NSCLC vary widely and are based on expert opinion and limited evidence. Methods: A Special Study of the National Cancer Database randomly selected stage I to III NSCLC patients for data reabstraction. For patients diagnosed between 2006 and 2007 and followed for 5 years through 2012, registrars documented all postsurgical imaging with indication (routine surveillance, new symptoms), recurrence, new primary cancers, and survival, with 5-year follow-up. Patients were placed into surveillance groups according to existing guidelines (3-month, 6-month, annual). Overall survival and survival after recurrence were analyzed using Cox Proportional Hazards Models. Results: A total of 4463 patients were surveilled with computed tomography scans; these patients were grouped based on time from surgery to first surveillance. Groups were similar with respect to age, sex, comorbidities, surgical procedure, and histology. Higher-stage patients received more surveillance. More frequent surveillance was not associated with longer risk-adjusted overall survival [hazard ratio for 6-month: 1.16 (0.99, 1.36) and annual: 1.06 (0.86-1.31) vs 3-month; P value 0.14]. More frequent imaging was also not associated with postrecurrence survival [hazard ratio: 1.02/month since imaging (0.99-1.04); P value 0.43]. Conclusions: These nationally representative data provide evidence that more frequent postsurgical surveillance is not associated with improved survival. As the number of lung cancer survivors increases over the next decade, surveillance is an increasingly important major health care concern and expenditure.
Keywords: screening; guidelines; management; non-small cell lung cancer; computed tomography; surveillance; impact; scans; dose computed-tomography; curative-intent therapy
Journal Title Annals of Surgery
Volume: 268
Issue: 4
Conference Dates: 2018 Apr 19-21
Conference Location: Phoenix, AZ
ISBN: 0003-4932
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2018-10-01
Start Page: 632
End Page: 639
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000452663600010
DOI: 10.1097/sla.0000000000002955
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 30004919
Notes: Article; Proceedings Paper -- 138th Annual Meeting of the American-Surgical-Association (ASA) -- APR 19-21, 2018 -- Phoenix, AZ -- Source: Wos
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  1. David Randolph Jones
    417 Jones