Abstract

Introduction. Brain metastasis is a poor prognostic marker in lung cancer. However it is not known whether amongst patients with EGFR mutation those with brain metastases have a worse outcome. Methods. We compared the survival outcomes between EGFR mutation positive patients with and without brain metastases. In this retrospective analysis of prospective database of all metastatic lung cancer patients at our centre between July 2009 and December 2012, patients were treated with either combination chemotherapy or oral TKI. All patients with brain metastases received whole brain radiation. Kaplan Meier method was used for survival analysis and compared using log rank test. Results. 101 patients with EGFR mutated, metastatic lung cancer were studied. Fourteen had brain metastases and 87 did not. The common EGFR mutations were exon 19 deletion (61.3%) and exon 21 L858R mutation (28.7%). Overall response was 64% in extracranial metastasis group as compared to 50% in brain metastasis group. There was a significant worsening of median OS in the patients with brain metastases (11.6 months) compared with only extracranial metastases (18.7 months), P = 0.029. Conclusion. Amongst patients with EGFR mutant NSCLC, the presence of brain metastases leads to a worse outcome as compared to patients with extracranial metastases alone.

Highlights

  • Brain metastasis is a poor prognostic marker in lung cancer

  • 101 epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) positive patients were included in this study. 14 had brain metastasis

  • The male to female ratio was equal in patients with brain metastasis but was 0.81 in patients with extracranial metastasis

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Summary

Introduction

Brain metastasis is a poor prognostic marker in lung cancer It is not known whether amongst patients with EGFR mutation those with brain metastases have a worse outcome. Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with brain metastases who have activating mutations of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tend to do significantly better as compared to those with wild type EGFR (median survival of 12.9 months as compared to 3.1 months) [4], when treated with oral tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and cranial irradiation. The development of brain metastases in general predicts for a poor outcome in lung cancer, it is not known whether among patients who are EGFR mutation positive the subset of patients who develop brain metastases have an poor prognosis as compared to those EGFR mutation positive patients who have extracranial metastasis only. We performed a retrospective analysis to try to evaluate whether the presence of brain metastasis amongst patients with EGFR mutations is associated with a worse outcome as compared to those without brain metastasis

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