Study Shows Modest Improvement In Advanced Lung Cancer Overall Survival Rates

Research released in the December 2009 issue of the sought to determine whether the survival improvement among patients with metastatic has improved over the last two decades as reported in controlled clinical trials.

Researchers performed an analysis of over 100,000 patients with stage IV non-small (NSCLC) identified through the SEER database to evaluate trends in survival between 1990 and 2005 to assess the of on these patients. Daniel Morgensztern, MD of the Washington University and his team reviewed over 16 years of records from those in the unselected representative and found a modest, but statistically significant, improvement in overall . Specifically, one-year overall survival increased from 13.2 percent to 19.4 percent. Additionally, two-year overall survival increased from 4.5 percent to 7.8 percent.

Researchers noted the improvement in may reflect changes in the management of advanced NSCLC over the past two decades, including the development of new and regimens, increasing use of salvage chemotherapy and the introduction of molecularly targeted therapies.

“Although the development of several new agents led to a statistically significant survival improvement between 1990 and 2005, it is sobering that the one-year survival has improved by only 6 percent during this time,” says Dr. Morgensztern. “Real progress can only be achieved with a better understanding of and development of .”

Source:
C.
International Association for the Study of

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