Background: Patients with fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD) are at increased risk of lung cancer, yet the impact of antifibrotic therapy on oncologic outcomes remains unclear. Objective: This study aimed to explore associations between antifibrotic therapy and overall survival (OS) and acute exacerbations of ILD (AE-ILD) in patients with fibrotic ILD who develop lung cancer. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 61 patients from multiple Italian centers: 35 received antifibrotic therapy (pirfenidone or nintedanib) and 26 did not. Outcomes included OS from cancer diagnosis and post-treatment AE-ILD. Results: Mean OS was 17.9 months in the antifibrotic group and 33.2 months in the non-antifibrotic group; no adjusted survival analyses were possible due to missing censoring data, and these descriptive values should not be overinterpreted. AE-ILD occurred in 11.4% of antifibrotic-treated patients and 11.5% of those without antifibrotics. PD-L1 expression was detected in 24.1% vs. 21.8% of tumors in the two groups, and autoantibody positivity was observed in 22.8% vs. 30.7%, respectively, reflecting differences in ILD subtypes. Conclusions: In this heterogeneous real-world cohort, antifibrotic therapy was not associated with increased AE-ILD risk, and descriptive OS comparisons showed no clear survival advantage. These exploratory findings warrant confirmation in larger, prospective studies.

The Role of Antifibrotic Therapy in Pulmonary Fibrosis and Lung Cancer: A Multicenter Retrospective Analysis

Bertuccio, Francesco Rocco;Baio, Nicola;Perrotta, Fabio;Foschino Barbaro, Maria Pia;Bortolotto, Chandra;Corsico, Angelo Guido;Stella, Giulia Maria
2025-01-01

Abstract

Background: Patients with fibrotic interstitial lung disease (ILD) are at increased risk of lung cancer, yet the impact of antifibrotic therapy on oncologic outcomes remains unclear. Objective: This study aimed to explore associations between antifibrotic therapy and overall survival (OS) and acute exacerbations of ILD (AE-ILD) in patients with fibrotic ILD who develop lung cancer. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 61 patients from multiple Italian centers: 35 received antifibrotic therapy (pirfenidone or nintedanib) and 26 did not. Outcomes included OS from cancer diagnosis and post-treatment AE-ILD. Results: Mean OS was 17.9 months in the antifibrotic group and 33.2 months in the non-antifibrotic group; no adjusted survival analyses were possible due to missing censoring data, and these descriptive values should not be overinterpreted. AE-ILD occurred in 11.4% of antifibrotic-treated patients and 11.5% of those without antifibrotics. PD-L1 expression was detected in 24.1% vs. 21.8% of tumors in the two groups, and autoantibody positivity was observed in 22.8% vs. 30.7%, respectively, reflecting differences in ILD subtypes. Conclusions: In this heterogeneous real-world cohort, antifibrotic therapy was not associated with increased AE-ILD risk, and descriptive OS comparisons showed no clear survival advantage. These exploratory findings warrant confirmation in larger, prospective studies.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1532502
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