Affiliation:
1. Department of Thoracic Surgery and Institute of Thoracic Oncology Frontiers Science Center for Disease‐related Molecular Network, West China Hospital of Sichuan University Chengdu China
2. Department of Thoracic Surgery Daping Hospital, Army Medical University Chongqing China
3. Laboratory of Mitochondria and Metabolism, National‐Local Joint Engineering Research Centre of Translational Medicine of Anesthesiology West China Hospital, Sichuan University Chengdu China
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundCurrent treatment strategies for advanced non‐small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are highly individualized and subject to ongoing debates. In the era of immunotherapy, surgery assumes a critical role. The aim of this study was to investigate if subsequent surgical intervention, following a favorable response to immunotherapy and chemotherapy, could yield a more favorable prognosis for patients with advanced stage III NSCLC compared to the continuation of immunotherapy and chemotherapy.MethodsWe included patients whose tumors exhibited a favorable response (including partial response [PR] and complete response [CR]) to immunotherapy and chemotherapy. These patients were categorized into two groups based on their subsequent treatment plans: surgical and nonsurgical (continuation of maintenance immunotherapy and chemotherapy). The efficacy and long‐term prognosis of these groups were compared after matching them in a 1:1 ratio using propensity scores.ResultsIn total, 186 patients (93 in each group) were included in this study after matching via propensity scores. The 1‐ and 3‐year overall survival (OS) and progression‐free survival (PFS) rates were 96.0%, 88.5%, and 93.1%, 80.7% in the surgical group, and 93.2%, 83.1%, and 57.7%, 50.4% in the nonsurgical group, respectively. Patients in the surgical group exhibited significantly superior PFS and OS compared to those in the nonsurgical group (p = 0.025 and p = 0.00086). Univariate and multivariate analyses confirmed ΔBMI, Δtumor size reduction, tumor response, earlier clinical stage (IIIb vs. IIIa), and surgery as independent protective factor for patient prognosis. We further selected 101 patients with CR (39 in the surgical group and 62 in the nonsurgical group) and found that patients in the surgical group were significantly better in both PFS and OS. Our subgroup analysis in postoperative patients demonstrated that different surgical strategies did not significantly affect the long‐term prognosis of patients (PFS and OS) but could impact their perioperative experience.ConclusionPatients with advanced stage III NSCLC, whose tumors achieved PR and CR after 2–4 cycles of immunotherapy combined with chemotherapy, experience a more promising prognosis with subsequent surgical intervention compared with the continued immunotherapy. Despite encountering formidable obstacles, such as protracted surgical procedures and associated trauma, we must rise to the challenge and unleash the power of surgery after immunotherapy in advanced NSCLC.
Funder
Chengdu Municipal Science and Technology Program