Comparison of lung cancer aggressiveness in patients who never smoked compared to those who smoked
医学
肺癌
核医学
前瞻性队列研究
内科学
作者
Shoshana Adler,Rowena Yip,Huiwen Chan,Qiang Cai,Yeqing Zhu,Natthaya Triphuridet,Andrew Kaufman,Emanuela Taioli,Raja M. Flores,Claudia I. Henschke,David F. Yankelevitz
出处
期刊:Lung Cancer [Elsevier] 日期:2022-07-15卷期号:171: 90-96被引量:5
To determine whether radiographic measures of tumor aggressiveness differ by smoking status.All patients diagnosed with non-small-cell lung cancer(NSCLC) ≤ 30 mm in maximum diameter, without clinical evidence of metastasis who had both pre-treatment PET scans and two CT scans at least 90 days apart in a prospective cohort, the Initiative for Early Lung Cancer Research on Treatment(IELCART) at Mount Sinai between 2016 and 2020 were identified. Comparison of two measures of tumor aggressiveness, positron emission tomography(PET) SUVmax and tumor volume doubling time(VDT) by smoking status was performed.Of 417 patients identified, 158 patients had pre-treatment PET scans and at least two CT scans available. The two measures of tumor aggressiveness, SUVmax and VDT values were significantly different between patients who had never smoked and those who smoked: patients who never smoked had lower median SUVmax[2.5(IQR: 1.1-4.8) vs. 4.2(IQR:2.1-9.2),p = 0.002] and longer median VDT[(372.6 days vs. 225.6 days,p = 0.001)] compared to those who smoked. Using multivariable analyses, when adjusting for age and sex alone, SUVmax(p = 0.004) and VDT(p = 0.0001) remained significantly different by smoking status. The final multivariable analysis, adjusted for all three co-variates(sex, age and tumor histology) showed no significant difference in SUVmax and VDT by smoking status [SUVmax(p = 0.25) and VDT(p = 0.06)].Smoking history does not influence VDT or PET SUVmax measures of lung cancer aggressiveness.