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Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis

AIMS: Although brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma (GaC) is rare, it may significantly affect survival and quality of life. The aim of this large, comprehensive, population-based cohort investigation was to investigate factors that were associated with brain metastasis from GaC and to explo...

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Autores principales: Huang, Lei, Wang, Lei, Shi, Yan, Zhao, Yajie, Xu, Chenying, Zhang, Jun, Hu, Weiguo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9635449/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36338733
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.897681
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author Huang, Lei
Wang, Lei
Shi, Yan
Zhao, Yajie
Xu, Chenying
Zhang, Jun
Hu, Weiguo
author_facet Huang, Lei
Wang, Lei
Shi, Yan
Zhao, Yajie
Xu, Chenying
Zhang, Jun
Hu, Weiguo
author_sort Huang, Lei
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Although brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma (GaC) is rare, it may significantly affect survival and quality of life. The aim of this large, comprehensive, population-based cohort investigation was to investigate factors that were associated with brain metastasis from GaC and to explore the prognostic factors and time-dependent cumulative mortalities among cases with GaC and brain involvement. METHODS: Population-based information on cases with GaC diagnosed from 2010 to 2016 was obtained from a large-scale database. Factors that were associated with brain metastasis were investigated utilizing multivariable logistic regression. Time-dependent tumor-specific mortalities of cases with GaC and brain involvement were then computed utilizing the cumulative incidence functions (CIFs), and mortalities were compared between subgroups utilizing Gray’s test. Factors that were associated with death were further evaluated utilizing multivariable Fine–Gray subdistribution hazard regression. RESULTS: Together, 28,736 eligible cases were included, which comprised 231 (1%) cases with brain metastasis and 10,801 (38%) with metastasis to other sites, encompassing a follow-up of 39,168 person-years. Brain metastasis occurred more often among younger patients (within overall cancers), in cases with stomach cardia tumors, within cases with signet-ring cell carcinoma (within overall cancers), and within cases with positive lymph nodes (within overall tumors); it was less often detected among black people. Brain involvement was associated with more lung and bone metastases. The median survival time of cases having brain metastasis was only 3 months; the 6- and 12-month tumor-specific cumulative mortalities were 57% and 71%, respectively. Among cases with GaC and brain metastasis, those with gastric cardia cancers (when receiving radiotherapy), those undergoing resection, and those receiving chemotherapy had lower mortality risks, while younger patients (when receiving chemotherapy or radiotherapy) and people with positive lymph nodes (when receiving radiotherapy) had higher death hazards. CONCLUSION: Among patients with GaC, brain metastasis was correlated with several clinical and pathological variables, including ethnicity, age, cancer histology, location, lymph node involvement, and metastases to other sites. Cases having brain metastasis had poor survival that was correlated with age, cancer location, lymph node metastasis, and management. These findings offer vital clues for individualized patient care and future mechanistic explorations.
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spelling pubmed-96354492022-11-05 Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis Huang, Lei Wang, Lei Shi, Yan Zhao, Yajie Xu, Chenying Zhang, Jun Hu, Weiguo Front Oncol Oncology AIMS: Although brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma (GaC) is rare, it may significantly affect survival and quality of life. The aim of this large, comprehensive, population-based cohort investigation was to investigate factors that were associated with brain metastasis from GaC and to explore the prognostic factors and time-dependent cumulative mortalities among cases with GaC and brain involvement. METHODS: Population-based information on cases with GaC diagnosed from 2010 to 2016 was obtained from a large-scale database. Factors that were associated with brain metastasis were investigated utilizing multivariable logistic regression. Time-dependent tumor-specific mortalities of cases with GaC and brain involvement were then computed utilizing the cumulative incidence functions (CIFs), and mortalities were compared between subgroups utilizing Gray’s test. Factors that were associated with death were further evaluated utilizing multivariable Fine–Gray subdistribution hazard regression. RESULTS: Together, 28,736 eligible cases were included, which comprised 231 (1%) cases with brain metastasis and 10,801 (38%) with metastasis to other sites, encompassing a follow-up of 39,168 person-years. Brain metastasis occurred more often among younger patients (within overall cancers), in cases with stomach cardia tumors, within cases with signet-ring cell carcinoma (within overall cancers), and within cases with positive lymph nodes (within overall tumors); it was less often detected among black people. Brain involvement was associated with more lung and bone metastases. The median survival time of cases having brain metastasis was only 3 months; the 6- and 12-month tumor-specific cumulative mortalities were 57% and 71%, respectively. Among cases with GaC and brain metastasis, those with gastric cardia cancers (when receiving radiotherapy), those undergoing resection, and those receiving chemotherapy had lower mortality risks, while younger patients (when receiving chemotherapy or radiotherapy) and people with positive lymph nodes (when receiving radiotherapy) had higher death hazards. CONCLUSION: Among patients with GaC, brain metastasis was correlated with several clinical and pathological variables, including ethnicity, age, cancer histology, location, lymph node involvement, and metastases to other sites. Cases having brain metastasis had poor survival that was correlated with age, cancer location, lymph node metastasis, and management. These findings offer vital clues for individualized patient care and future mechanistic explorations. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-10-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9635449/ /pubmed/36338733 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.897681 Text en Copyright © 2022 Huang, Wang, Shi, Zhao, Xu, Zhang and Hu https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Oncology
Huang, Lei
Wang, Lei
Shi, Yan
Zhao, Yajie
Xu, Chenying
Zhang, Jun
Hu, Weiguo
Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis
title Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis
title_full Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis
title_fullStr Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis
title_full_unstemmed Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis
title_short Brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: A large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis
title_sort brain metastasis from gastric adenocarcinoma: a large comprehensive population-based cohort study on risk factors and prognosis
topic Oncology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9635449/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36338733
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.897681
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