Pathologic nodal response in gastric cancer: Do all patients need adjuvant therapy?

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 107-107
Author(s):  
Brandon George Smaglo ◽  
Yvonne Sada ◽  
Hop Sanderson Tran Cao ◽  
Mehmet Akce ◽  
Henry Mok ◽  
...  

107 Background: Recent data from the MAGIC trial show that pathologically positive lymph nodes (ypN+) despite neoadjuvant (NA) chemotherapy are associated with poorer survival. Although the use of NA therapy has increased, pathologic disease response to multimodality therapy (MMT) and its impact on outcome have not been well-defined. Methods: This retrospective cohort study of the National Cancer Database included patients with cN+ gastric cancer who underwent NA therapy followed by surgical resection between 2006 and 2012. Patients were categorized by NA treatment (chemotherapy or concurrent chemoradiation). Pre-treatment clinical (cN) and pathologic nodal staging (ypN) were used to determine downstaging rates from cN+ to ypN0. The association between overall risk of death and NA treatment, nodal response, and the use of adjuvant therapy was evaluated with multivariable Cox regression. Results: Among 1,489 patients with cN+ gastric cancer receiving NA therapy, 45.5% were treated with chemotherapy and 54.5% with chemoradiation. Rates of nodal downstaging were 29.9% for chemotherapy and 45.4% for chemoradiation. On multivariable analysis, treatment sequence and type were not associated with risk of death. Median survival was significantly lower in patients with ypN+ compared to those with ypN0 disease (27.7 vs 79.7 months; log-rank, p < 0.001).Among patients with ypN+ disease (n = 918), median survival was greater if adjuvant therapy was received (32.6 months vs. 25.3 months, log-rank, p < 0.001); adjuvant therapy was associated with a 19% decreased risk of death (Hazard Ratio [HR] 0.81; 95% CI 0.66-0.99), with further reduction among those who underwent a margin negative resection (HR 0.73; 95% CI 0.58-0.92). In patients with ypN0, adjuvant therapy was not associated with a lower risk of death. Conclusions: Over one third of node-positive gastric cancers demonstrated pathologic nodal downstaging with NA treatment, with chemoradiation yielding a higher response than chemotherapy. Patients with ypN+ had worse survival, and appeared to benefit from adjuvant therapy. Future gastric cancer trials should better define the role for NA chemoradiation and help individualize the use of adjuvant therapy based on nodal response.

2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yvonne H. Sada ◽  
Brandon G. Smaglo ◽  
Joy C. Tan ◽  
Hop S. Tran Cao ◽  
Benjamin L. Musher ◽  
...  

Background: Pathologically positive lymph nodes (ypN+) after preoperative chemotherapy are associated with poor survival in patients with gastric cancer. Little is known about the association between response to preoperative therapy and the benefit of postoperative therapy. Methods: This retrospective cohort study of the National Cancer Database included patients with clinically node-positive (cN+) gastric cancer treated with preoperative therapy followed by surgery (2006–2014). Preoperative treatment modality was categorized as the inclusion of radiation therapy (RT) or chemotherapy alone. Pretreatment clinical and pathologic stages were used to determine pathologic treatment response rates. The association between overall risk of death and preoperative treatment, disease response, and adjuvant therapy use was evaluated using multivariable Cox regression. Results: Preoperative RT was used in 53.6% of 1,976 patients with cN+ gastric cancer, (74.3% cardia and 10.1% noncardia). The nodal response rate was 38.9% and was higher with RT than with chemotherapy alone (cardia, 46.0% vs 29.1%; P<.001; noncardia, 43.8% vs 31.9%; P=.06). Preoperative RT was associated with an approximate 2-fold increase in the odds of pathologic response compared with chemotherapy. Overall, use of adjuvant therapy was not associated with a decreased risk of death. A primary tumor response with residual nodal disease was not associated with survival (hazard ratio [HR], 1.03; 95% CI, 0.66–1.60). However, a nodal response with residual primary disease was significantly associated with survival (HR, 0.54; 95% CI, 0.44–0.65). Conclusions: More than one-third of node-positive gastric cancers showed pathologic nodal response with preoperative treatment. RT is associated with a higher response than chemotherapy. Patients with ypN+ disease have worse survival, regardless of whether they receive postoperative therapy. Future gastric cancer trials should evaluate the role of preoperative RT and individualize postoperative therapy use.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 21-22
Author(s):  
Shelby Meckstroth ◽  
Rong Wang ◽  
Xiaomei Ma ◽  
Nikolai A. Podoltsev

Background: Myelofibrosis (MF) is a Philadelphia chromosome negative myeloproliferative neoplasm associated with systemic and splenomegaly-related symptoms, cytopenias and decreased survival. Approval of ruxolitinib, an oral janus kinase (JAK)-inhibitor, for higher-risk MF patients (pts) by the Food and Drug Administration in 11/ 2011 opened a new era of targeted treatment for this disease. There are limited data on the "real-world" clinical experiences and outcomes of pts with MF treated in the JAK inhibitor era. MF became reportable to population-based cancer registries including the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program in 2001, making its investigation possible at the population level. The objective of this study was to assess the patterns of care and outcomes of older MF pts in the ruxolitinib era. Methods: Using the linked SEER-Medicare database, we identified a cohort of older pts diagnosed with MF from 2007 through 2015 who fulfilled the following eligibility criteria: 1) aged 66-99 years at diagnosis; 2) had known month of diagnosis; 3) were not identified from death certificate or autopsy only; 4) had continuous enrollment in Medicare Parts A, B and no enrollment in health maintenance organizations from 1 year before diagnosis until the end of follow-up (death or 12/31/2016, whichever came first); 5) had continuous enrollment in Medicare Part D from diagnosis until the end of follow-up; and 6) bone marrow biopsy claim from 1 year before diagnosis to end of follow up. Treatments were assessed via Medicare parts B&D claims. Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests were used to compare survival between patient groups. Multivariable cox proportional hazards regression models were used to assess the effect of ruxolitinib use on survival in MF pts. Aside from treatment, we considered the influence of several characteristics on survival, including age at diagnosis, sex, race/ethnicity, marital status, comorbidities, SEER region and percentage living in poverty at the census tract level. Results: Among 528 MF pts, median age at diagnosis was 76 (interquartile range [IQR], 71- 80) years with 88.8% white and 56.1% male. 230 pts were diagnosed in the early era (2007-2011), and 298 in the late era (2012-2015), of which 113 (37.9%) were ruxolitinib users. There was no difference among any evaluated characteristics between two eras and by ruxolitinib status in the late era. The median duration of ruxolitinib use was 11.9 months. Similar number of pts started at 5, 10, 15 and 20 mg twice a day (BID) (Figure 1). Among 31 pts who started at ≤5 mg BID, 15 (48.4%) never had their dose of ruxolitinib escalated. While on ruxolitinib treatment, nearly half of the pts received additional medications for symptom management including hydroxyurea (22.6%), prednisone (17.9%) or both (10.4%). &lt; 11 users were able to go up to the highest dose of 25 mg BID. Ruxolitinib was interrupted &gt; 30 days for 31 times by 20 of 113 (17.7%) pts with median interruption duration of 43 (IQR 34-71) days. The median survival was 2.70 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.87-3.41) years and 2.62 (95% CI: 2.15-3.07) for the early and late era pts, respectively (p for log-rank 0.91). The multivariable analysis showed no impact of diagnosis era on survival (late vs early era hazard ratio (HR) of 1.08, 95% CI 0.83-1.40; p= 0.57). There was no difference in survival by ruxolitinib status (log-rank test, p=0.31), with a median survival of 2.76 (95% CI: 2.01-4.15) years and 2.53 (95% CI: 1.92-3.07) years among users and non-users, respectively (Figure 3). In the multivariable analysis, the risk of death among ruxolitinib users compared to non-users was not statistically significant with HR of 0.82 (95% CI 0. 59-1.16; p= 0.26). Conclusions: Older MF pts treated with ruxolitinib had similar survival when compared to pts who did not receive this medication, but the choice of ruxolitinib might have been influenced by disease risk which we were unable to assess. For many ruxolitinib users, the drug was interrupted, the dose was not escalated, additional medications were used concurrently (possibly to help control disease manifestation), and treatment was discontinued quickly after initiation. Optimization of ruxolitinib use may be necessary to accomplish better outcomes. Furthermore, development of new drugs which may be used together with ruxolitinib or after its discontinuation is needed. The work was supported by The Frederick A. Deluca Foundation. Disclosures Wang: Celgene/BMS: Research Funding. Ma:Celgene/BMS: Research Funding; BMS: Consultancy. Podoltsev:Jazz Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding; Celgene: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Agios Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy, Honoraria; Sunesis Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding; Pfizer: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Blueprint Medicines: Consultancy, Honoraria; Bristol-Myers Squib: Consultancy, Honoraria; Genentech: Research Funding; AI Therapeutics: Research Funding; Samus Therapeutics: Research Funding; Astellas Pharma: Research Funding; Kartos Therapeutics: Research Funding; CTI biopharma: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; Boehringer Ingelheim: Research Funding; Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria; Alexion: Consultancy, Honoraria; Incyte: Consultancy, Honoraria; Astex Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding; Daiichi Sankyo: Research Funding; Arog Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 150-150
Author(s):  
Paola Catherine Montenegro ◽  
Lourdes Lopez ◽  
Shirley Quintana ◽  
Luis Augusto Casanova ◽  
Victor Castro ◽  
...  

150 Background: Adjuvant chemoradiotherapy is the standard treatment in Western countries in gastric cancer patients submitted to curative resection. INT 0116 pivotal trial established adyuvant chemoradiation as the standar care for resected high risk adenocarcionoma of the stomach in US however was hampered by suboptimal surgery. There is controversial data about efficacy of this adjuvant therapy in patients who have undergone D2 lymphadenectomy predominantly. In our hospital D2 lymphadenectomy is standar surgery for gastric cancer. Methods: Retrospective study with gastric adenocarcinoma patients stage II to IV M0 who underwent curative resection at Instituto Nacional de enfermedades Neoplasicas Lima- Peru between 2001 and 2006 Standard treatment at institution is D2 lymphadenectomy. Chemoradiotherapy according to INT 0116 was given like adjuvant therapy. Survival curves were calculated according to Kaplan-Meier method and compared with log-rank test. Multivariate analysis of prognostic factors related to survival was performed by Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for age, stage and adjuvant chemoradiotherapy. Results: 84 patients were included 60.3% male and 39.3% female. Median age was 40.5 years old. The patologic stage were T1-T2 (12.3%), T3-T4 ( 50% ), N0-N1 (10.7%), N2-N3 (89.3%). D2 lymphadenectomy was performed in all patients. The 3-year DFS was 17% and 3-year overall survivall was 23.9% years.However when we analized by subgroups the overal survival was significantly longer in group N1 ( 61%) and N2 (58.9%) that N3 (18.3%) and DFS were N1 (60%), N2 (55%) and N3 (16.3%). Conclusions: Adjuvant chemoradiotherapy decreased risk of death and relapse in patients with node positive N1-N2 , who underwent curative resection with D2 lymphadenectomy, but recurrence was most frecuent in N3 node positive, maybe is necesary improve the chemotherapy in this group of patientes for dicrease the rate of relapse.


2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 244-244
Author(s):  
Vanessa Costa Miranda ◽  
Luiza Dib-Faria ◽  
Maria Ignez Freitas Melro Braghiroli ◽  
Jorge Sabbaga ◽  
Daniel Fernandes Saragiotto ◽  
...  

244 Background: GC is considered the standard of care for pts with advanced biliary tract cancer (BTC), providing median survival of nearly one year. (Valle J et al. NEJM 2010) Nevertheless, many pts experience poor outcomes, leading to a growing interest to identify pts who might benefit from such treatment. Here we aimed to investigate clinical and laboratory factors associated with poor survival among BTC pts treated with GC. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated all consecutive pts with advanced/metastatic BTC who received first line GC at the Instituto do Cancer do Estado de Sao Paulo, Brazil, in a 2 year-period. Clinical and laboratory variables that could influence pts’ outcomes were gathered from medical charts. Cox regression proportional hazard model was used to investigate the following prognostic factors for death: pre-treatment biliary deobstruction, baseline Ca 19.9, any GC interruptions or dose reductions, baseline ECOG status, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) and age. P values < 0.05 in multivariable analysis were considered significant. Results: From January/2009 to July/2011, 72 pts were identified. The median age was 60 years (range 30-80 years), 45 pts (62.5%) were female and 50 (69.4%) presented baseline ECOG 0-1. The median number of cycles of CG was 4 (range 1-9). Grade 3 /4 neutropenia and thrombocytopenia occurred in 16.6% and 12.5% of pts, respectively. Median survival of the whole cohort was 9.53 months (95% CI: 6.2 - 11.4). Median survival in pts with ECOG 0/1 was 13.5 months (95% CI: 9,5 – NR) and among pts with ECOG 2/3 3,5 months (95% CI: 1-7). In the Cox multivariable model, ECOG 2 /3 versus 0/1 (HR: 8.4, 95% CI: 3.4 to 20.7; p<0.001) and CCI score ≥ 2 (HR: 9.5 95% CI: 1.6 to 55.3; p= 0.012) significantly predicted for poor survival. There was a trend for improved survival among pts who had biliary drainage before starting GC (HR: 2.3 95% CI: 1.0 - 5.3; p= 0.051). Conclusions: In this retrospective cohort of unselected pts with advanced BTC treated with first line GC, poor performance status and multiple comorbid illnesses were associated with dismal prognosis. Treatment with GC should be carefully discussed before being offered to these pts.


2015 ◽  
Vol 33 (3_suppl) ◽  
pp. 128-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren McLendon Postlewait ◽  
Malcolm Hart Squires ◽  
David A. Kooby ◽  
George A. Poultsides ◽  
Sharon M. Weber ◽  
...  

128 Background: Conflicting data exist on the prognostic implication of signet ring cell (SRC) histology in gastric adenocarcinoma (GAC). Our aim was to assess the association of SRC with recurrence and survival in patients undergoing resection of GAC. Methods: All pts who underwent curative intent resection for GAC from 2000 to 2012 at 7 academic institutions comprising the US Gastric Cancer Collaborative were included. 30-day mortalities were excluded. Survival analyses included Kaplan Meier log rank and multivariate Cox regression. Primary endpoints were recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS). Stage-specific analysis was performed. Results: Of 965 pts, 768 met inclusion criteria. SRC was present in 39.5% and was associated with female gender (52.9% vs 38.6%; p<0.001), younger age (61 vs 67 yrs; p<0.001), poor differentiation (94.8% vs 50.3%; p<0.001), perineural invasion (PNI: 41.4% vs 23%; p<0.001), distal location (82.2% vs 70.1%; p<0.001), receipt of adjuvant therapy (63% vs 51.2%; p=0.002), and more advanced stage (Stage 3: 55.2% vs 36.5%; p<0.001). SRC was associated with earlier recurrence (56.7mo vs median not reached (MNR); p=0.009) and decreased OS (33.7mo vs 46.6mo; p=0.011). When accounting for other adverse pathologic features, PNI (HR 1.57; p=0.016) and higher TNM stage (HR 2.63; p<0.001) were associated with decreased RFS, but SRC was not. PNI (HR 1.53; p=0.006), higher TNM Stage (HR 2.10; p<0.001), greater size (HR 1.05; p=0.014), and adjuvant therapy (HR 0.50; p<0.001) were associated with OS. SRC was not an independent predictor of OS. Stage-specific analysis showed no association between SRC and RFS or OS in Stage 1 or 3. In Stage 2, SRC was associated with earlier recurrence (38.1mo vs MNR; p=0.005) but not OS. The negative association of SRC with decreased RFS persisted in multivariate analysis (HR 3.11; p=0.015). Conclusions: Signet ring histology is associated with other adverse pathologic features including higher grade and higher TNM stage but is not independently associated with reduced RFS or OS. Identification of signet ring histology during preoperative evaluation should not, in isolation, dictate treatment strategy.


2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (4_suppl) ◽  
pp. 148-148
Author(s):  
Yvonne Sada ◽  
Brandon George Smaglo ◽  
Hop Sanderson Tran Cao ◽  
Mehmet Akce ◽  
Henry Mok ◽  
...  

148 Background: Althoughmultimodality therapy (MMT) is recommended for most patients with resectable gastric cancer, no single approach has been established as standard. As such, little is known about current national practice patterns and MMT treatment sequencing for patients with gastric cancer. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of ≥ T2 and/or node positive gastric cancer patients treated with MMT using the National Cancer Database (2006-2012). Patients were categorized based on type of MMT (chemotherapy, concurrent chemoradiation (cXRT), or both chemotherapy and cXRT) and treatment sequence (preoperative, postoperative, or perioperative). Accuracy of pre-treatment clinical nodal staging was ascertained by comparison to pathologic nodal staging in patients treated with upfront surgery. Multivariable Cox regression was used to evaluate the association between overall risk of death and MMT type and sequence. Results: Among 4,857 patients, 14.1% were treated perioperatively, 48.0% preoperatively, and 37.9% postoperatively. Rates of chemotherapy, cXRT, and both chemotherapy and cXRT were 32.1%, 53.4%, and 14.5%. Among patients treated with upfront surgery, sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV of clinical nodal staging were 70.7%, 88.8%, 92.1%, and 62.2%, respectively. Over the study period, use of cXRT decreased (61.8% 2006 vs 52.0% 2012; trend test, p < 0.001) while use of chemotherapy increased (23.6% vs 35.7%; trend test, p < 0.001) and use of both chemotherapy and cXRT did not change. There was an increase in the use of perioperative treatment (8.1% vs 17.4%; trend test, p < 0.001) while postoperative treatment decreased (44.4% vs 31.1%; trend test, p < 0.001). After multivariable modeling, neither type of MMT nor treatment sequence was associated with risk of death. Conclusions: Although current national practice patterns favor pre- and perioperative treatment, one third of patients were treated with upfront surgery. Survival was not associated with MMT type or sequence. However, given the high false negative rate of clinical nodal staging and high non-completion rate of postoperative treatment (50% in MAGIC trial), efforts to improve gastric cancer outcomes should focus on increasing use of preoperative therapy.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yilin Tong ◽  
Yan Zhao ◽  
Zexing Shan ◽  
Jianjun Zhang

Abstract Background: Serum tumor markers including AFU, AFP, CEA, CA199, CA125 and CA724, are of great importance in the diagnosis, prognostic prediction and recurrence monitoring of gastrointestinal malignancies. However, their significance in gastric cancer (GC) patients with neoadjuvant therapy (NCT) is still uncertain. The aim of this study was to evaluate the predictive value of these six tumor markers in locally advanced GC patients who underwent NCT and curative surgery. Methods: In total, 290 locally advanced GC patients who underwent NCT and D2 radical gastrectomy were retrospectively analyzed. Data on their tumor markers before (pre-) and after (post-) NCT and pathological characteristics were extracted from the database of our hospital. The optimal cutoff values of the six tumor markers were calculated by the ROC curve and Youden index. Their predictive significance was analyzed and survival curves for overall survival (OS) were obtained by the Kaplan-Meier method. Associations between categorical variables were explored by the chi-square test or Fisher's exact test. Multivariate analyses were performed by the Cox regression model. Results: Pre- and post-CA199, -CA125 and -CA724 could predict overall survival (all P < 0.05), but only the change (diff-) of CA199 was related to prognosis (P = 0.05). In the multivariable analysis, pre- (P = 0.014) and post-CA724 (P = 0.036) remained significant, though diff-CA724 was not an independent prognostic factor (P = 0.581). In addition, pre- and post-CA199, -CA125 and -CA724 were associated with lymph node metastasis (N- vs N+) and pathological stage (Ⅰ-Ⅱ vs Ⅲ) (all P < 0.05). Moreover, post-CA724 was related to the vascular or lymphatic invasion (P = 0.019), while pre-CA724 was not (P = 0.082). However, AFU, AFP and CEA showed no association with survival (P > 0.05). Conclusions: CA724 is an independent factor for prognosis and could be used to predict ypN and ypTNM stage in locally advanced GC patients undergoing NCT and curative resection.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi114-vi114
Author(s):  
Josiah An ◽  
Adithya Chennamadhavuni ◽  
Sarah Mott ◽  
Rohan Garje

Abstract BACKGROUND Glioblastoma is one of the most aggressive and commonly encountered brain tumors. Standard of care includes surgical resection with adjuvant or concurrent chemoradiation which is predominantly based on adult clinical trials. Our study objective was to assess whether survival differed in AYA compared to older adults. METHODS The National Cancer Database was used to identify patients with at least surgically resected glioblastoma from 2004 to 2016. Cox regression models were utilized to estimate the effect of treatment on overall survival (OS) while accounting for immortal time bias (3-months) and clustering within facility. RESULTS Among 51,718 patients with glioblastoma identified, 2,930 patients were AYA. Multivariable analysis (MVA) shows OS was significantly higher in AYA, female, non-white, high income, unilateral cancer patients with private insurance receiving treatments in high volume facilities. OS among AYA patients was significantly lower in surgery + (radiation or chemotherapy: S+(RT or CT) group compared to surgery only (S) (HR=1.33, 95% CI 1.06–1.65), but no significant survival difference between surgery + chemoradiation (S+C+RT) groups and surgery only (HR=0.97, 95% CI 0.83–1.14). Median survival is ~28 months in AYA among S and S+C+RT groups whereas significantly lower survival (median OS ~18 months) is seen in S+RT or CT. Non-AYA patients were at 2 times increased risk of death compared to AYA patients who received the same type of treatment. CONCLUSIONS In conclusion, AYA population has more than twice the median OS in comparison to non-AYA patients. Worse overall survival was seen among S+RT or CT in comparison to S and S+RT+CT in AYA group. For patients needing either chemotherapy or radiation with surgery, possibly a trimodal approach might provide better survival advantage. Prospective studies are needed to further explore optimal treatment modalities in this unique population.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (24) ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Lukács Krogager ◽  
Peter Søgaard ◽  
Christian Torp‐Pedersen ◽  
Henrik Bøggild ◽  
Gunnar Gislason ◽  
...  

Background Hyperkalemia can be harmful, but the effect of correcting hyperkalemia is sparsely studied. We used nationwide data to examine hyperkalemia follow‐up in patients with hypertension. Methods and Results We identified 7620 patients with hypertension, who had the first plasma potassium measurement ≥4.7 mmol/L (hyperkalemia) within 100 days of combination antihypertensive therapy initiation. A second potassium was measured 6 to 100 days after the episode of hyperkalemia. All‐cause mortality within 90 days of the second potassium measurement was assessed using Cox regression. Mortality was examined for 8 predefined potassium intervals derived from the second measurement: 2.2 to 2.9 mmol/L (n=37), 3.0 to 3.4 mmol/L (n=184), 3.5 to 3.7 mmol/L (n=325), 3.8 to 4.0 mmol/L (n=791), 4.1 to 4.6 mmol/L (n=3533, reference), 4.7 to 5.0 mmol/L (n=1786), 5.1 to 5.5 mmol/L (n=720), and 5.6 to 7.8 mmol/L (n=244). Ninety‐day mortality in the 8 strata was 37.8%, 21.2%, 14.5%, 9.6%, 6.3%, 6.2%, 10.0%, and 16.4%, respectively. The multivariable analysis showed that patients with concentrations >5.5 mmol/L after an episode of hyperkalemia had increased mortality risk compared with the reference (hazard ratio [HR], 2.27; 95% CI, 1.60–3.20; P <0.001). Potassium intervals 3.5 to 3.7 mmol/L and 3.8 to 4.0 mmol/L were also associated with increased risk of death (HR, 1.71; 95% CI, 1.23–2.37; P <0.001; HR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.04–1.76; P <0.001, respectively) compared with the reference group. We observed a trend toward increased risk of death within the interval 5.1 to 5.5 mmol/L (HR, 1.29; 95% CI, 0.98–1.69). Potassium concentrations <4.1 mmol/L and >5.0 mmol/L were associated with increased risk of cardiovascular death. Conclusions Overcorrection of hyperkalemia to levels <4.1 mmol/L was frequent and associated with increased all‐cause and cardiovascular mortality. Potassium concentrations >5.5 mmol/L were also associated with an increased all‐cause and cardiovascular mortality.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (7_suppl) ◽  
pp. 284-284
Author(s):  
Ronald S. Go ◽  
Adam C Bartley ◽  
Cynthia S Crowson ◽  
Nilay D. Shah ◽  
Elizabeth B. Habermann ◽  
...  

284 Background: MM is an uncommon cancer with annual incidence of only 27,000 cases in the US. Our study determined the extent to which the number of MM patients treated annually in a treatment facility affected all-cause mortality. Methods: We used the National Cancer Data Base (NCDB) to identify adult patients with MM diagnosed from 2003-2011. NCDB is sourced from over 1,500 Commission on Cancer-accredited cancer registries representing 70% of cancer cases in the US. We classified treatment facilities by quartiles based on facility volume (mean patients/year): Quartile 1 (Q1: < 3.6), Quartile 2 (Q2: 3.6-6.1), Quartile 3 (Q3: 6.1-10.3) and Quartile 4 (Q4: > 10.3). We used hot deck imputation to account for missing data, Cox regression to analyze the association between facility volume and time-to-death, and random intercepts to adjust for multiple patients per facility. Results: There were 94,722 MM patients cared for at 1,333 facilities. Most patients (73.5%) were diagnosed and treated in the same facility. The median age at diagnosis was 67 years and 54.7% were males. The median annual facility volume was 6.1 patients/year (IQR: 3.6-10.3; range: 0.2-109.9). The distribution of patients according to facility volume was Q1 (5.2%), Q2 (12.6%), Q3 (21.9%) and Q4 (60.3%). The unadjusted median overall survival by facility volume was: Q1: 26.9 months, Q2: 29.1 months, Q3: 31.9 months and Q4: 49.1 months. After multivariable analysis adjusting for demographic (sex, age, race, ethnicity), socioeconomic (income, education, insurance type), geographic (area of residence, treatment facility location), co-morbidity (Charlson-Deyo score), and disease-specific (year of diagnosis) factors, we show that facility volume remains an independent predictor of all-cause mortality. Compared to patients treated at Q4 facilities, patients treated at lower quartile facilities had a higher risk of death (Q3 HR: 1.16 [95% CI, 1.12-1.20]; Q2: 1.21 [1.17-1.26]; Q1: 1.27 [1.22-1.34]). We observed an inverse volume-outcome relationship up to an annual facility volume of approximately 60 patients. Conclusions: MM patients treated at higher volume facilities had lower risk of mortality compared to those treated at lower volume facilities.


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