Read more

September 14, 2021
1 min read
Save

Older adults with late-stage NSCLC benefit from immunotherapy

You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

Older patients with late-stage non-small cell lung cancer appeared to benefit from immunotherapy, according to results presented at International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer World Conference on Lung Cancer.

“Immune function is impaired [among] older patients, but whether these patients benefit from immune checkpoint inhibitors was unclear,” Shinkichi Takamori, MD, researcher in the department of thoracic oncology at National Hospital Organization of the Kyushu Cancer Center in Japan, told Healio. “In addition, older patients are often excluded from clinical trials; therefore, clinical benefit from immunotherapy in daily practice is unknown.”

Older patients with late-stage non-small cell lung cancer appeared to benefit from immunotherapy.
Data derived from Takamori S, et al. Abstract MA15.07. Presented at: International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer World Conference on Lung Cancer (virtual meeting); Sept. 8-14, 2021.

Researchers used the National Cancer Database to identify 86,173 patients with stage IV NSCLC treated between 2014 and 2015.

The analysis included 24,136 patients aged 75 years or older (immunotherapy, n = 2,241; no immunotherapy n = 21,895) and 62,037 patients aged younger than 75 years (immunotherapy, n = 8,968; no immunotherapy, n = 53,069).

Researchers compared OS between patients who received immunotherapy and those who did not.

Univariate analysis showed a survival benefit with immunotherapy among patients aged 75 years or older (median OS, 11.9 months vs. 5.4 months; HR = 0.61; 95% CI, 0.58-0.64), as well as among those aged younger than 75 years (median OS, 14.5 months vs. 7.8 months; HR = 0.67; 95% CI, 0.65-0.68).

Multivariate analysis confirmed a survival benefit with immunotherapy in both age groups, showing poorer survival for patients who did not receive immune checkpoint inhibitors among those aged 75 years or older (HR = 1.63; 95% CI, 1.55-1.71) and among those aged younger than 75 years (HR = 1.5; 95% CI, 1.46-1.54).

Shinkichi Takamori, MD
Shinkichi Takamori

“If elderly patients cannot receive cytotoxic chemotherapy due to lower functional capacity or poor performance status, oncologists can introduce them to immune checkpoint inhibitors as a treatment option,” Takamori said. “This study suggests that immune checkpoint inhibitor monotherapy is beneficial for elderly patients and that the combination of immune checkpoint inhibitor plus chemotherapy is also a standard first-line therapy.

“Some subgroup analyses of elderly patients from the clinical trial indicated that combination therapy of immunotherapy and chemotherapy is more beneficial to younger patients compared with elderly patients,” Takamori added. “Further study is needed to investigate whether immune checkpoint inhibitor monotherapy or combination therapy is appropriate for older [patients with lung cancer].”