학술논문

Clinical impact of COVID-19 on patients with cancer (CCC19): a cohort study
Document Type
article
Author
Kuderer, Nicole MChoueiri, Toni KShah, Dimpy PShyr, YuRubinstein, Samuel MRivera, Donna RShete, SanjayHsu, Chih-YuanDesai, Aakashde Lima Lopes, GilbertoGrivas, PetrosPainter, Corrie APeters, SolangeThompson, Michael ABakouny, ZiadBatist, GeraldBekaii-Saab, TaniosBilen, Mehmet ABouganim, NathanielLarroya, Mateo BoverCastellano, DanielDel Prete, Salvatore ADoroshow, Deborah BEgan, Pamela CElkrief, ArielleFarmakiotis, DimitriosFlora, DanielGalsky, Matthew DGlover, Michael JGriffiths, Elizabeth AGulati, Anthony PGupta, ShilpaHafez, NavidHalfdanarson, Thorvardur RHawley, Jessica EHsu, EmilyKasi, AnupKhaki, Ali RLemmon, Christopher ALewis, ColleenLogan, BarbaraMasters, TylerMcKay, Rana RMesa, Ruben AMorgans, Alicia KMulcahy, Mary FPanagiotou, Orestis APeddi, PrakashPennell, Nathan AReynolds, KerryRosen, Lane RRosovsky, RachelSalazar, MarySchmidt, AndrewShah, Sumit AShaya, Justin ASteinharter, JohnStockerl-Goldstein, Keith ESubbiah, SukiVinh, Donald CWehbe, Firas HWeissmann, Lisa BWu, Julie Tsu-YuWulff-Burchfield, ElizabethXie, ZhuoerYeh, AlbertYu, Peter PZhou, Alice YZubiri, LeyreMishra, SanjayLyman, Gary HRini, Brian IWarner, Jeremy LConsortium, COVID-19 and CancerAbidi, MaheenAcoba, Jared DAgarwal, NeerajAhmad, SyedAjmera, ArchanaAltman, JessicaAngevine, Anne HAzad, NiloBar, Michael HBardia, AdityaBarnholtz-Sloan, JillBarrow, BrianaBashir, BabarBelenkaya, RimmaBerg, StephanieBernicker, Eric HBestvina, ChristineBishnoi, RohitBoland, GenevieveBonnen, MarkBouchard, GabrielleBowles, Daniel WBusser, FionaCabal, AngeloCaimi, PaoloCarducci, Theresa
Source
The Lancet. 395(10241)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Health Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Clinical Research
Aging
Prevention
Cancer
Lung
Good Health and Well Being
Aged
Antiviral Agents
Azithromycin
Betacoronavirus
COVID-19
Cause of Death
Comorbidity
Coronavirus Infections
Databases
Factual
Female
Humans
Hydroxychloroquine
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasms
Pandemics
Pneumonia
Viral
Prognosis
Risk Factors
SARS-CoV-2
COVID-19 Drug Treatment
COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium
Medical and Health Sciences
General & Internal Medicine
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
BackgroundData on patients with COVID-19 who have cancer are lacking. Here we characterise the outcomes of a cohort of patients with cancer and COVID-19 and identify potential prognostic factors for mortality and severe illness.MethodsIn this cohort study, we collected de-identified data on patients with active or previous malignancy, aged 18 years and older, with confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection from the USA, Canada, and Spain from the COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19) database for whom baseline data were added between March 17 and April 16, 2020. We collected data on baseline clinical conditions, medications, cancer diagnosis and treatment, and COVID-19 disease course. The primary endpoint was all-cause mortality within 30 days of diagnosis of COVID-19. We assessed the association between the outcome and potential prognostic variables using logistic regression analyses, partially adjusted for age, sex, smoking status, and obesity. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04354701, and is ongoing.FindingsOf 1035 records entered into the CCC19 database during the study period, 928 patients met inclusion criteria for our analysis. Median age was 66 years (IQR 57-76), 279 (30%) were aged 75 years or older, and 468 (50%) patients were male. The most prevalent malignancies were breast (191 [21%]) and prostate (152 [16%]). 366 (39%) patients were on active anticancer treatment, and 396 (43%) had active (measurable) cancer. At analysis (May 7, 2020), 121 (13%) patients had died. In logistic regression analysis, independent factors associated with increased 30-day mortality, after partial adjustment, were: increased age (per 10 years; partially adjusted odds ratio 1·84, 95% CI 1·53-2·21), male sex (1·63, 1·07-2·48), smoking status (former smoker vs never smoked: 1·60, 1·03-2·47), number of comorbidities (two vs none: 4·50, 1·33-15·28), Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 2 or higher (status of 2 vs 0 or 1: 3·89, 2·11-7·18), active cancer (progressing vs remission: 5·20, 2·77-9·77), and receipt of azithromycin plus hydroxychloroquine (vs treatment with neither: 2·93, 1·79-4·79; confounding by indication cannot be excluded). Compared with residence in the US-Northeast, residence in Canada (0·24, 0·07-0·84) or the US-Midwest (0·50, 0·28-0·90) were associated with decreased 30-day all-cause mortality. Race and ethnicity, obesity status, cancer type, type of anticancer therapy, and recent surgery were not associated with mortality.InterpretationAmong patients with cancer and COVID-19, 30-day all-cause mortality was high and associated with general risk factors and risk factors unique to patients with cancer. Longer follow-up is needed to better understand the effect of COVID-19 on outcomes in patients with cancer, including the ability to continue specific cancer treatments.FundingAmerican Cancer Society, National Institutes of Health, and Hope Foundation for Cancer Research.