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Geriatric Medicine

Comprehensive evaluation of older patients with suspected malignancy: 5-year experience of a tertiary geriatric inpatient unit

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Pages 1085-1091 | Received 06 Apr 2023, Accepted 26 Jul 2023, Published online: 04 Aug 2023
 

Abstract

Objective

Geriatric cancer population is growing. Both cancer and geriatric conditions are associated with some degree of inflammatory burden. To comprehensively present our five years of experience in patients with suspicion of a malignancy, signs and symptoms that are more prominent as indicator of malignancies, conditions that cause malignancy-like symptoms, and common malignancies and newly diagnosed malignancies in geriatric patients with a history of cancer.

Methods

Patients hospitalized with suspected malignancy in a geriatric inpatient unit were included. Demographic data, hospitalization symptoms, clinical findings, smoking history, laboratory and further examinations, comprehensive geriatric assessment scores, length of hospital stay and discharge diagnoses were examined. Endoscopy and colonoscopy findings were also recorded.

Results

Of the 1,104 patients hospitalized for various reasons in the five-year period, 197 (106 women) were suspected of having a malignancy. Mean age was 78.22 ± 7.27. A total of 65 (33%) patients were diagnosed with a malignancy. Amount of smoking (pack/year) and geriatric depression scale (GDS) scores were significantly higher in malignant group (p = .009; p < .001; respectively). Of the hospitalization symptoms, frequency of lumbar-hip-back pain was significantly higher in the malignant group (p = .043). The three most common cancers were hematologic (32%), lung (15%), and gastrointestinal cancers (15%). Gastritis was the most common pathological finding from gastroscopies (58%), and adenoma from colonoscopies (24%). Malignancies were detected in 40% of patients with a history of malignancy, and 55% of the newly detected malignancies were new primaries. Immunoglobulin G4-related disease was one of the detected interested benign conditions.

Conclusion

The frequency and presentation patterns of malignancies may differ in older adults. Depressive symptoms are common in geriatric cancer patients. Geriatric patients with a history of malignancy should be evaluated in detail for new primary malignancies.

Transparency

Declaration of funding

This paper was not funded.

Declaration of financial/other relationships

The authors have no relevant affiliations or financial involvement with any organization or entity with a financial interest in or financial conflict with the subject matter or materials discussed in the manuscript. This includes employment, consultancies, honoraria, stock ownership or options, expert testimony, grants or patents received or pending, or royalties. Peer reviewers on this manuscript have no relevant financial or other relationships to disclose.

Author contributions

B.B.K., V.S. and H.Y. conceived and designed the analysis B.B.K. and G.U.A. collected the data, B.B.K. and D.U. wrote the paper, H.E.M., V.S. and T.E.G. performed the analysis, D.S.E, A.D. contributed data or analysis tools, revised the paper. All authors agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

Acknowledgements

None.

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