Cancers (Jul 2021)

Combined Assessment of Preoperative Frailty and Sarcopenia Allows the Prediction of Overall Survival in Patients with Lung Cancer (NSCLC) and Surgically Treated Brain Metastasis

  • Inja Ilic,
  • Anton Faron,
  • Muriel Heimann,
  • Anna-Laura Potthoff,
  • Niklas Schäfer,
  • Christian Bode,
  • Valeri Borger,
  • Lars Eichhorn,
  • Frank A. Giordano,
  • Erdem Güresir,
  • Andreas H. Jacobs,
  • Yon-Dschun Ko,
  • Jennifer Landsberg,
  • Felix Lehmann,
  • Alexander Radbruch,
  • Ulrich Herrlinger,
  • Hartmut Vatter,
  • Patrick Schuss,
  • Matthias Schneider

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13133353
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 13
p. 3353

Abstract

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Neurosurgical resection represents an important therapeutic pillar in patients with brain metastasis (BM). Such extended treatment modalities require preoperative assessment of patients’ physical status to estimate individual treatment success. The aim of the present study was to analyze the predictive value of frailty and sarcopenia as assessment tools for physiological integrity in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who had undergone surgery for BM. Between 2013 and 2018, 141 patients were surgically treated for BM from NSCLC at the authors’ institution. The preoperative physical condition was assessed by the temporal muscle thickness (TMT) as a surrogate parameter for sarcopenia and the modified frailty index (mFI). For the ≥65 aged group, median overall survival (mOS) significantly differed between patients classified as ‘frail’ (mFI ≥ 0.27) and ‘least and moderately frail’ (mFI p = 0.02)). Sarcopenia revealed significant differences in mOS for the p = 0.036)). The present study confirms a predictive value of preoperative frailty and sarcopenia with respect to OS in patients with NSCLC and surgically treated BM. A combined assessment of mFI and TMT allows the prediction of OS across all age groups.

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