Dysphagia prevalence and associated survival differences in older patients with lung cancer: A SEER-Medicare population-based study.
Journal Article (Journal Article)
INTRODUCTION: The impact of dysphagia in persons with lung cancer is unknown. The objective of this study is to measure the prevalence and survival differences associated with dysphagia in older adults with lung cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Linked SEER cancer registries - Medicare data, 1991-2009 was utilized to identify 201,674 persons with lung cancer. Most were male (53%), had regional or distant disease (74%), and were aged <80 years (82%). The pre-existing prevalence of dysphagia was identified using claims codes before the lung cancer diagnosis. Survival was analyzed using Kaplan Meier curves and Cox proportional hazard models. RESULTS: 8517 (4%) had dysphagia prior to their lung cancer diagnoses. Younger age, worse disease stage, more comorbidities, and hospital rurality were associated with higher likelihood of dysphagia. Patients with dysphagia had worse survival (median survival 8 months [95%CI 7,9]) than those without dysphagia (median survival 12 months [95%CI 11,13]). After adjusting for sociodemographic, clinical, and disease characteristics, dysphagia was still associated with worse survival (Hazard ratio of death 1.34, [95%CI 1.28-1.35], p ≤ .0001). DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: This is the first Medicare claims-based study of older adults with lung cancer and dysphagia. Pre-existing dysphagia occurred in approximately 1 in 25 patients with lung cancer and was associated with worse survival. Determining the best methods to evaluate and treat dysphagia in patients with lung cancer is an important avenue for future studies.
Full Text
Duke Authors
Cited Authors
- Marmor, S; Cohen, S; Fujioka, N; Cho, LC; Bhargava, A; Misono, S
Published Date
- September 2020
Published In
Volume / Issue
- 11 / 7
Start / End Page
- 1115 - 1117
PubMed ID
- 32169546
Pubmed Central ID
- PMC7483634
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1879-4076
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1016/j.jgo.2020.02.015
Language
- eng
Conference Location
- Netherlands