Patient Characteristics Associated with Definitive Diagnosis of Metastatic Pancreatic Cancer in Those Initially Diagnosed with Cancer of Unknown Primary
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Abstract
Purpose: Cancer of unknown primary (CUP) is the fourth most common cause of cancer mortality in the U.S. Median survival after CUP diagnosis is 3-4 months. As CUP and metastatic pancreatic cancer (PC) are comparable in prevalence and survival, PC diagnosis is a useful endpoint to assess patient characteristics associated with definitive diagnosis in older patients who initially present with CUP. Methods: . This study used 2010-2015 SEER-Medicare data. Logistic regression models compared patient characteristics who received definitive diagnosis in two subsets: CUP-PC and PC only. Results: . Approximately 26% of patients who received a definitive diagnosis of metastatic pancreatic cancer started with an initial diagnosis of CUP (n=17,565). The odds of definitive diagnosis in CUP-PC were lower for those with a comorbidity score of 0 (OR 0.85 [0.79, 0.91]) and epithelial/unspecified histology (OR 0.76 [0.71, 0.82]). The odds of definitive diagnosis in CUP-PC were higher for patients of Other race (OR 1.27 [1.13, 1.43]) compared to White patients. Conclusion: Definitive diagnosis of CUP-PC was favorable in patients in the Other race category with fewer or no comorbidities. Unfavorable characteristics included older patients and those with epithelial/unspecified histology. Future studies will focus on patterns of care and survival in patients with CUP-PC.
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- europepmc
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- unpaywall
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License: CC-BY-4.0