Abstract

BackgroundAlthough patients with advanced or metastatic lung cancer have poor prognosis, admission to the ICU for management of life-threatening complications has increased over the years. Patients with newly diagnosed lung cancer appear as good candidates for ICU admission, but more robust information to assist decisions is lacking. The aim of our study was to evaluate the prognosis of newly diagnosed unresectable lung cancer patients.MethodsA retrospective multicentric study analyzed the outcome of patients admitted to the ICU with a newly diagnosed lung cancer (diagnosis within the month) between 2010 and 2013.ResultsOut of the 100 patients, 30 had small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and 70 had non-small cell lung cancer. (Thirty patients had already been treated with oncologic treatments.) Mechanical ventilation (MV) was performed for 81 patients. Seventeen patients received emergency chemotherapy during their ICU stay. ICU, hospital, 3- and 6-month mortality were, respectively, 47, 60, 67 and 71%. Hospital mortality was 60% when invasive MV was used alone, 71% when MV and vasopressors were needed and 83% when MV, vasopressors and hemodialysis were required. In multivariate analysis, hospital mortality was associated with metastatic disease (OR 4.22 [1.4–12.4]; p = 0.008), need for invasive MV (OR 4.20 [1.11–16.2]; p = 0.030), while chemotherapy in ICU was associated with survival (OR 0.23, [0.07–0.81]; p = 0.020).ConclusionThis study shows that ICU management can be appropriate for selected newly diagnosed patients with advanced lung cancer, and chemotherapy might improve outcome for patients with SCLC admitted for cancer-related complications. Nevertheless, tumors’ characteristics, numbers and types of organ dysfunction should be taken into account in the decisional process before admitting these patients in ICU.

Highlights

  • Patients with advanced or metastatic lung cancer have poor prognosis, admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) for management of life-threatening complications has increased over the years

  • Lung cancer patients were judged as poor candidates for ICU admission because their prognosis was thought to be even worse than other cancer patients [5]

  • For patients from Saint-Louis Hospital, the ICU database was approved by the institutional review board (CECIC Clermont-Ferrand-IRB n5891; Ref: 2007-16), which waived the need for signed informed consent of the participants, in accordance with French legislation on noninterventional studies

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Summary

Introduction

Patients with advanced or metastatic lung cancer have poor prognosis, admission to the ICU for management of life-threatening complications has increased over the years. The aim of our study was to evaluate the prognosis of newly diagnosed unresectable lung cancer patients. The development of targeted therapies and the emergence of immunotherapy [2, 3] recently improved outcome for patients with advanced and metastatic nonsmall cell lung cancer. Those patients remain exposed to numerous complications related to cancer itself, to treatments and to other comorbidities, and in many cases, require admission to intensive care units (ICUs) for their management. Other studies showed that cancer patients had mortality rates equivalent to patients with severe comorbidities like cardiac failure or cirrhosis [8, 9]

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