Abstract

e20630 Background: Metastatic disease at the time of lung cancer diagnosis influences therapy choice and prognosis. Metastasis to the brain, bones, and liver may lead to higher morbidity. Differences in the prevalence of metastatic sites among patients (pts) of White (W) and Black (B) race and their association with overall survival need further elucidation. Methods: Utilizing the SEER database from 2010-2019, we identified W and B pts with metastatic small cell (SCLC), squamous cell (SQ-NSCLC), and adenocarcinoma (AD-NSCLC). Only pts with bone, brain, or liver metastasis (mets) at diagnosis were included. Metastatic site prevalence rates were determined. Cox proportional hazard ratios for survival were calculated while controlling for gender, ethnicity, other metastatic sites, chemotherapy, and radiation. Results: Total of 338,411 pts, 11.4% of B race. In SCLC, B pts had a higher prevalence of brain mets, while W pts demonstrated a higher prevalence of bone and liver mets. Survival between W and B pts with SCLC was comparable except for modest superior survival in B pts with liver mets. In SQ-NSCLC, metastatic disease for the 3 sites of interest was more prevalent in B pts, most notably in brain. However, survival did not differ. In AD-NSCLC, B pts were more likely to present with brain and liver mets. B pts with bone mets had inferior survival. Conclusions: Significant differences in patterns of mets at the time of lung cancer diagnosis between W and B pts exist. B pts with SCLC and liver mets had longer survival. Interestingly, B pts with bone mets and SQ-NSCLC had better survival while those with AD-NSCLC fared worse. Multiple factors, including socioeconomic, environmental/smoking patterns and access to healthcare, may have contributed. Further studies are needed. [Table: see text]

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