女性肺癌。

The Annals of Thoracic Surgery Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Epub Date: 2021-11-03 DOI:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2021.09.060
Lillian L Tsai, Ngoc-Quynh Chu, William A Blessing, Philicia Moonsamy, Yolonda L Colson
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:肺癌是美国女性癌症相关死亡的主要原因。女性肺癌的临床特征、组织学、流行病学和治疗反应是独特的。方法:检索1989 - 2021年Medline发表的女性肺癌相关文献。随后的叙述性回顾侧重于确定风险因素、诊断和治疗对这些患者手术护理的重要性的差异。结果:探讨肺癌性别差异的研究显示,女性在危险因素、组织学和治疗反应方面存在差异,术后生存期明显优于男性(41.8个月vs 26.8个月,P = 0.007),抗pd -1联合化疗的临床获益更大(风险比,0.44;95%可信区间,0.25-0.76)与男性相比(风险比,0.76;95%置信区间为0.64-0.91)。吸烟仍然是一个主要的危险因素,多项临床试验表明,肺癌筛查对女性更有好处。然而,年轻的非吸烟肺癌患者是女性的可能性是女性的两倍,因此提倡更广泛的基于性别的筛查标准。基因突变、雌激素信号和感染因素在表现、组织学、预后和治疗反应等性别差异中的潜在作用被探讨。结论:总的来说,关于性别如何影响肺癌的风险、治疗决定和结果,仍有很多未知之处。然而,在表现、环境风险、分子驱动因素和突变负担方面的具体差异的证据支持有必要更好地利用这些性别相关差异,进一步改善检测、诊断、手术结果和系统方案,以推进女性肺癌的整体护理策略。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lung Cancer in Women.

Background: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death for women in the United States. Clinical characteristics, histology, epidemiology, and treatment responses are unique for women with lung cancer.

Methods: A literature search of Medline publications from 1989 to 2021 was conducted for lung cancer in women. Subsequent narrative review focused on identified differences in risk factors, diagnosis, and treatment of importance to the surgical care of these patients.

Results: Studies investigating lung cancer in which sex differences were explored demonstrated differences in risk factors, histology, and treatment response among women, with a significant postsurgical survival advantage over men (41.8 months vs 26.8 months, P = .007) and greater clinical benefit from anti-PD-1 combined with chemotherapy (hazard ratio, 0.44; 95% confidence interval, 0.25-0.76) compared with men (hazard ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.64-0.91). Smoking remains a dominant risk factor, and multiple clinical trials suggest lung cancer screening provides greater benefit for women. However young nonsmoking patients with lung cancer are 2-fold more likely to be female, advocating for broader sex-based screening criteria. Potential roles of genetic mutations, estrogen signaling, and infectious elements in sex-based differences in presentation, histology, prognosis, and treatment response are explored.

Conclusions: Overall much remains unknown regarding how sex influences lung cancer risk, treatment decisions, and outcomes. However evidence of specific differences in presentation, environmental risk, molecular drivers, and mutational burden support the need to better leverage these sex-associated differences to further improve detection, diagnosis, surgical outcomes, and systemic regimens to advance the overall care strategy for women with lung cancer.

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