Lung Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Compare Patient-centered Outcomes for Lung Cancer Resection Patients Followed With Alternative Intervals of Surveillance Imaging
There are 13.7 million Americans currently living with a history of cancer. With continued
improvements in cancer treatment and increasing life expectancy, this number is expected to
reach nearly 18 million within the next decade. The care of these cancer patients, including
surveillance during the post-treatment survivorship phase, is an increasingly important major
health care concern and expenditure. As the fourth leading diagnosis among cancer survivors,
lung cancer is emerging as a chronic problem that currently affects over 450,000 Americans
and is expected to grow by nearly 20% by 2022.
Lung cancer is the second most common cancer in the United States. Of the estimated 182,550
patients newly diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) this year, approximately 35%
will present with localized disease and be eligible for curative resection. For patients with
limited NSCLC, surgical resection is the most effective method of controlling the primary
tumor and provides the best opportunity for cure. A recent analysis by this group
demonstrated that the number of lung cancer resections has increased over the past decade,
with over 45,000 lung cancer resections performed annually in the US.
This research will address a critical gap in knowledge because the optimal approach to
post-treatment surveillance following lung cancer resection is unknown. The intensity of
recommended surveillance visits ranges from every 3 months during the first two years to an
annual visit. Imaging modalities range from CT scans to chest radiographs to no routine
imaging for asymptomatic patients. The reason for these significant differences is a lack of
quality data on lung cancer surveillance and clinical guidelines based largely on small
retrospective analyses and expert opinion.
The National Cancer Data Base (NCDB) provides real world national lung cancer resection and
surveillance data on over 70% of newly diagnosed lung cancers from more than 1,500
institutions. This study will compare the effectiveness of the three most common surveillance
intensities (CT scans every 3 months vs. 6 months vs. annually) on the stakeholder selected
outcome of survival. All analyses will be risk adjusted for differences in patient
characteristics at baseline, including tumor characteristics, patient age, comorbid disease,
and other potential confounders. Analyses will also be adjusted for the competing risk of
death.
This study will use a special study of the National Cancer Database to develop a cohort of
NSCLC survivors undergoing surveillance. Cox proportional hazards regression and competing
risk analyses will compare the effectiveness of the three most common surveillance
intensities (3 months vs. 6 months vs. annually) on survival.
There is also a plan to engage cancer survivors to guide the development of our study
comparators, outcomes and demonstration of results.
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