Clinical and Translational Radiation Oncology (Jul 2023)

Mortality during or shortly after curative-intent radio-(chemo-) therapy over the last decade at a large comprehensive cancer center

  • Sebastian M. Christ,
  • Jonas Willmann,
  • Philip Heesen,
  • Anja Kühnis,
  • Stephanie Tanadini-Lang,
  • Esmée L. Looman,
  • Maiwand Ahmadsei,
  • David Blum,
  • Matthias Guckenberger,
  • Panagiotis Balermpas,
  • Caroline Hertler,
  • Nicolaus Andratschke

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41
p. 100645

Abstract

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Background and Introduction: Definitive surgical, oncological and radio-oncological treatment may result in significant morbidity and acute mortality. Mortality during or shortly after treatment in patients undergoing curative radio-(chemo)-therapy has not been studied systematically. We reviewed all curative radio-(chemo-)therapies at a large comprehensive cancer center over the last decade. Materials and Methods: The institutional record was screened for patients who received curative-intent radio-(chemo-)therapy and deceased during or within 30 days after radiotherapy. Curative therapy was defined as prescribed dosage of EQD2 ≥ 50 Gy for radiotherapy alone and EQD2 ≥ 40 Gy for radiochemotherapies. Data on demographics, disease and treatment were assembled and assessed. Results: Of 15,255 radiotherapy courses delivered at our center, 8,515 (56%) were performed with curative-intent. During or within 30 days after radio-(chemo-)therapy, 78 patients died (0.9% of all curative-intent courses). Median age of the deceased patients was 70 (IQR, 62–78) years, and 36% (28/78) were female. Median pre-therapeutic ECOG-PS was 1 (IQR, 0–2) and Charlson-Comorbidity-Index was 3+ (IQR, 2–3+). The most common primary malignancies were head and neck cancer (33/78; 42%) and central nervous system tumors (13/78; 17%). Peritherapeutic mortality varied by primary tumor, with the highest prevalence observed in head and neck and gastrointestinal cancer patients with 2.9% (33/1,144) and 2.4% (8/332), respectively. Among patients with known cause of death (34/78; 44%), tumor progression (12/34; 35%) and pulmonary complications/causes (11/34; 35%) were most common. On multivariable regression analysis, a worse ECOG-PS was associated with a relatively earlier peri-radiotherapeutic death (p = 0.014). Conclusion: Mortality during or within 30 days of curative-intent radio-(chemo-)therapy was low, yet highest for head and neck (2.9%) and gastrointestinal tumor (2.4%) patients. Reasons for these findings include rapid tumor progression in some cancers, good patient selection, with ECOG-PS being most useful and predictive for avoiding early mortality. Future research should help refine predictors for peri-RT mortality.

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