Cargando…

Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Pneumonitis is a serious complication following radiotherapy for lung cancer. Since it generally occurs weeks or even months following treatment, it is often not attributed to the previous irradiation and may be missed. The PARALUC trial was performed to help develop a mobile applica...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rades, Dirk, Werner, Elisa M., Glatzel, Esther, Bohnet, Sabine, Schild, Steven E., Tvilsted, Søren S., Janssen, Stefan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9856605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36672276
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15020326
_version_ 1784873673614688256
author Rades, Dirk
Werner, Elisa M.
Glatzel, Esther
Bohnet, Sabine
Schild, Steven E.
Tvilsted, Søren S.
Janssen, Stefan
author_facet Rades, Dirk
Werner, Elisa M.
Glatzel, Esther
Bohnet, Sabine
Schild, Steven E.
Tvilsted, Søren S.
Janssen, Stefan
author_sort Rades, Dirk
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Pneumonitis is a serious complication following radiotherapy for lung cancer. Since it generally occurs weeks or even months following treatment, it is often not attributed to the previous irradiation and may be missed. The PARALUC trial was performed to help develop a mobile application (app) that allows early diagnosis and treatment of radiation pneumonitis. The primary goal was the identification of the optimal cut-off of a pneumonitis score (presence or absence of pneumonitis). Based on the severity of related symptoms, scoring points ranged between 0 and 9. The highest sensitivity was achieved with 0–4 points, followed by 5 points, and the highest specificity with 5–6 points. The highest Youden-index (optimal cut-off) was found for 5 points. Moreover, pneumonitis was significantly associated with an increase of ≥3 points from baseline. Patient satisfaction with this scoring tool was very high. Five points were the optimal cut-off to differentiate between pneumonitis and other pulmonary morbidities. The score provided high diagnostic accuracy and patient satisfaction. ABSTRACT: Radiotherapy of lung cancer may cause pneumonitis that generally occurs weeks or months following therapy and can be missed. This prospective trial aimed to pave the way for a mobile application (app) allowing early diagnosis of pneumonitis. The primary goal was the identification of the optimal cut-off of a score to detect pneumonitis of grade ≥2 after radiotherapy for lung cancer. Based on the severity of symptoms (cough, dyspnea, fever), scoring points were 0–9. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC)-curves were used to describe the sensitivity and specificity. The area under the ROC-curve (AUC) was calculated to judge the accuracy of the score, Youden-index was employed to define the optimal cut-off. Until trial termination, 57 of 98 patients were included. Eight of 42 patients evaluable for the primary endpoint (presence or absence of radiation pneumonitis) experienced pneumonitis. AUC was 0.987 (0.961–1.000). The highest sensitivity was achieved with 0–4 points (100%), followed by 5 points (87.5%), highest specificity with 5–6 points (100%). The highest Youden-index was found for 5 points (87.5%). The rate of patient satisfaction with the symptom-based scoring system was 93.5%. A cut-off of 5 points was identified as optimal to differentiate between pneumonitis and no pneumonitis. Moreover, pneumonitis was significantly associated with an increase of ≥3 points from baseline (p < 0.0001). The scoring system provided excellent accuracy and high patient satisfaction. Important foundations for the development of a mobile application were laid.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9856605
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98566052023-01-21 Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial Rades, Dirk Werner, Elisa M. Glatzel, Esther Bohnet, Sabine Schild, Steven E. Tvilsted, Søren S. Janssen, Stefan Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Pneumonitis is a serious complication following radiotherapy for lung cancer. Since it generally occurs weeks or even months following treatment, it is often not attributed to the previous irradiation and may be missed. The PARALUC trial was performed to help develop a mobile application (app) that allows early diagnosis and treatment of radiation pneumonitis. The primary goal was the identification of the optimal cut-off of a pneumonitis score (presence or absence of pneumonitis). Based on the severity of related symptoms, scoring points ranged between 0 and 9. The highest sensitivity was achieved with 0–4 points, followed by 5 points, and the highest specificity with 5–6 points. The highest Youden-index (optimal cut-off) was found for 5 points. Moreover, pneumonitis was significantly associated with an increase of ≥3 points from baseline. Patient satisfaction with this scoring tool was very high. Five points were the optimal cut-off to differentiate between pneumonitis and other pulmonary morbidities. The score provided high diagnostic accuracy and patient satisfaction. ABSTRACT: Radiotherapy of lung cancer may cause pneumonitis that generally occurs weeks or months following therapy and can be missed. This prospective trial aimed to pave the way for a mobile application (app) allowing early diagnosis of pneumonitis. The primary goal was the identification of the optimal cut-off of a score to detect pneumonitis of grade ≥2 after radiotherapy for lung cancer. Based on the severity of symptoms (cough, dyspnea, fever), scoring points were 0–9. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC)-curves were used to describe the sensitivity and specificity. The area under the ROC-curve (AUC) was calculated to judge the accuracy of the score, Youden-index was employed to define the optimal cut-off. Until trial termination, 57 of 98 patients were included. Eight of 42 patients evaluable for the primary endpoint (presence or absence of radiation pneumonitis) experienced pneumonitis. AUC was 0.987 (0.961–1.000). The highest sensitivity was achieved with 0–4 points (100%), followed by 5 points (87.5%), highest specificity with 5–6 points (100%). The highest Youden-index was found for 5 points (87.5%). The rate of patient satisfaction with the symptom-based scoring system was 93.5%. A cut-off of 5 points was identified as optimal to differentiate between pneumonitis and no pneumonitis. Moreover, pneumonitis was significantly associated with an increase of ≥3 points from baseline (p < 0.0001). The scoring system provided excellent accuracy and high patient satisfaction. Important foundations for the development of a mobile application were laid. MDPI 2023-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9856605/ /pubmed/36672276 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15020326 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Rades, Dirk
Werner, Elisa M.
Glatzel, Esther
Bohnet, Sabine
Schild, Steven E.
Tvilsted, Søren S.
Janssen, Stefan
Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial
title Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial
title_full Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial
title_fullStr Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial
title_full_unstemmed Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial
title_short Early Identification of Pneumonitis in Patients Irradiated for Lung Cancer—Final Results of the PARALUC Trial
title_sort early identification of pneumonitis in patients irradiated for lung cancer—final results of the paraluc trial
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9856605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36672276
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15020326
work_keys_str_mv AT radesdirk earlyidentificationofpneumonitisinpatientsirradiatedforlungcancerfinalresultsoftheparaluctrial
AT wernerelisam earlyidentificationofpneumonitisinpatientsirradiatedforlungcancerfinalresultsoftheparaluctrial
AT glatzelesther earlyidentificationofpneumonitisinpatientsirradiatedforlungcancerfinalresultsoftheparaluctrial
AT bohnetsabine earlyidentificationofpneumonitisinpatientsirradiatedforlungcancerfinalresultsoftheparaluctrial
AT schildstevene earlyidentificationofpneumonitisinpatientsirradiatedforlungcancerfinalresultsoftheparaluctrial
AT tvilstedsørens earlyidentificationofpneumonitisinpatientsirradiatedforlungcancerfinalresultsoftheparaluctrial
AT janssenstefan earlyidentificationofpneumonitisinpatientsirradiatedforlungcancerfinalresultsoftheparaluctrial