Antibiotic use goes along with reduced survival in head-and-neck cancer patients after radiotherapy
Alexander Rühle,
Germany
PO-1089
Abstract
Antibiotic use goes along with reduced survival in head-and-neck cancer patients after radiotherapy
Authors: Jiadai Zou1, Ilinca Popp1, Margaretha Glaser1, Lennard Halle1, Simon KB Spohn1, Eleni Gkika1, Constantinos Zamboglou1, Andreas Knopf2, Anca-Ligia Grosu1, Nils H Nicolay1, Alexander Rühle1
1Medical Center – University of Freiburg, Department of Radiation Oncology, Freiburg, Germany; 2Medical Center – University of Freiburg, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Freiburg, Germany
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Purpose or Objective
Pre- and peritherapeutic antibiotics administration
has been shown to negatively impact the oncological outcome of melanoma and
lung cancer patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors, possibly by affecting
the microbiome-immune system-cancer axis. We therefore aimed to explore the
effects of antibiotic application on the outcomes of head-and-neck squamous
cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients undergoing definitive (chemo)radiotherapy
[(C)RT].
Material and Methods
In this single-center
retrospective study, a cohort of 220 HNSCC patients who were treated with (C)RT
between 2010 and 2019 was evaluated. Information about antibiotics application
including indication, duration and drug classes were collected from electronic
patient records. Patient and treatment characteristics were compared depending
on antibiotic usage with t-tests and chi-square tests. The influence of antibiotics
administration on progression-free (PFS) and overall survival (OS) was determined
with Kaplan-Meier analyses.
Results
A total of 154
patients (70%) received antibiotics in a time interval ranging between 30 days
before (C)RT until treatment completion. ECOG status, age, N stage, radiotherapy
dose and radiotherapy completion rate showed no differences between patients
with and without antibiotics treatment, whereas patients who received
antibiotics exhibited higher T stages and more often underwent RT instead of
CRT. While 93 patients (42%) obtained antibiotics during the 30 days prior to
(C)RT initiation, 100 (46%) were treated with antibiotics during (C)RT. The most
frequent indication of antibiotics prescription was single-shot antibiotic
prophylaxis before port catheter implantation (n=132). Peritherapeutic antibiotics
administration significantly worsened both PFS (median 10 vs. 24 months, p<0.05) and OS (median 26 vs. 36
months, p<0.05), while
pretherapeutic usage had no effect. This effect was found pronounced in the
cohort of patients aged <75 years (median PFS 10 vs. 44 months, p<0.05, and median OS 26
vs. 54 months, p<0.05),
whereas there was no significant difference among older patients (≥75 years).
Conclusion
Peri- but not
pretherapeutic antibiotic usage was associated with reduced PFS and OS in HNSCC
patients receiving (C)RT. In the future, microbiome
analyses may help to better understand the mechanisms underlying the observed
effects of antibiotic use in HNSCC patients receiving (C)RT.