Abstract

Background: The NVALT-11/DLCRG-02 phase III study compared PCI to observation after chemo-radiotherapy (RT) for stage III NSCLC and showed a significant decrease in the cumulative incidence of symptomatic brain metastases (BM) in the PCI arm at two years (7% vs 27% [HR 0.23]). We here performed exploratory subgroup analyses. Methods: Two year cumulative incidence rates were calculated and competing risk regression, with death of any cause as competing risk, was used to examine the time to symptomatic BM in the following subgroups: age, gender, performance status, disease stage and tumour type, prior surgery, chemotherapy cycles, thoracic RT dose and total concurrent chemo-RT treatment time. For continuous variables, the median was used as a cut-off value. The effect of PCI was only examined if the initial result was significant. Results: In total, 174 patients were analysed. The symptomatic BM incidence was significantly lower in the subgroup of older (>61 years) versus younger ( ¼ 61 years) compared to younger ( ¼ <61 years) patients, likely due to higher numbers of adenocarcinoma in the younger patients group. The effect of PCI was only significant in younger patients. This study was randomized based on treatment allocation and subgroups might be too small to detect significant differences. Therefore, our results are hypothesis generating and should be prospectively tested.

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