Background: With extending life expectancy, more people are diagnosed with cutaneous malignancies at advanced ages and are offered nonsurgical treatment. We assessed outcomes of the oldest-old adults after electrochemotherapy (ECT). Methods: The International Network for Sharing Practices of ECT (InspECT) registry was queried for adults aged ≥90 years (ys) with skin cancers/cutaneous metastases of any histotype who underwent bleomycin-ECT (2006–2019). These were subanalysed with patients aged <90 ys after matching 1:2 for tumor location, number, size, histotype, and previous treatments. We assessed ECT modalities, toxicity (CTCAE), response (RECIST), and patient perception (EQ-5D). Results: Sixty-one patients represented the study cohort (median 92 ys, range 92–104), 122 the control group (median 77 ys, range 23–89). Among the oldest-old, 44 patients (72%) had primary/recurrent skin cancers, 17 (28%) cutaneous metastases. Median tumour size was 15 mm (range, 5–450). The oldest-old adults underwent ECT mainly under local/regional anaesthesia (59% vs 39% p =.012). We observed no differences regarding dose and route of chemotherapy (intravenous vs intratumoral, p =.308), electrode geometry (linear vs hexagonal, p =.172) and procedural duration (18 vs 21 min, p =.378). Complete response (57.4 [95%-CI 44.1%–70.0%] vs 64.7% [95%-CI 55.6%–73.2%], p =.222) and 1-year local control (76.7% vs 81.7, p =.092) rates were comparable. Pain and skin hyperpigmentation were mild in both groups. Skin ulceration persisted longer in the oldest-old patients (4.4 vs 2.4 months, p =.008). Conclusions: The oldest-old adults with cutaneous malignancies undergo ECT most commonly under local/regional anaesthesia with safety profiles and clinical effectiveness similar to their younger counterparts, except in case of ulcerated tumors.
Outcomes of older adults aged 90 and over with cutaneous malignancies after electrochemotherapy with bleomycin: A matched cohort analysis from the InspECT registry
Quaglino P.;
2021-01-01
Abstract
Background: With extending life expectancy, more people are diagnosed with cutaneous malignancies at advanced ages and are offered nonsurgical treatment. We assessed outcomes of the oldest-old adults after electrochemotherapy (ECT). Methods: The International Network for Sharing Practices of ECT (InspECT) registry was queried for adults aged ≥90 years (ys) with skin cancers/cutaneous metastases of any histotype who underwent bleomycin-ECT (2006–2019). These were subanalysed with patients aged <90 ys after matching 1:2 for tumor location, number, size, histotype, and previous treatments. We assessed ECT modalities, toxicity (CTCAE), response (RECIST), and patient perception (EQ-5D). Results: Sixty-one patients represented the study cohort (median 92 ys, range 92–104), 122 the control group (median 77 ys, range 23–89). Among the oldest-old, 44 patients (72%) had primary/recurrent skin cancers, 17 (28%) cutaneous metastases. Median tumour size was 15 mm (range, 5–450). The oldest-old adults underwent ECT mainly under local/regional anaesthesia (59% vs 39% p =.012). We observed no differences regarding dose and route of chemotherapy (intravenous vs intratumoral, p =.308), electrode geometry (linear vs hexagonal, p =.172) and procedural duration (18 vs 21 min, p =.378). Complete response (57.4 [95%-CI 44.1%–70.0%] vs 64.7% [95%-CI 55.6%–73.2%], p =.222) and 1-year local control (76.7% vs 81.7, p =.092) rates were comparable. Pain and skin hyperpigmentation were mild in both groups. Skin ulceration persisted longer in the oldest-old patients (4.4 vs 2.4 months, p =.008). Conclusions: The oldest-old adults with cutaneous malignancies undergo ECT most commonly under local/regional anaesthesia with safety profiles and clinical effectiveness similar to their younger counterparts, except in case of ulcerated tumors.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.