A. D'Silva
University of Calgary
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Featured researches published by A. D'Silva.
PLOS ONE | 2017
R. Tudor; A. D'Silva; Alain Tremblay; Paul MacEachern; Don M. Morris; Darren R. Brenner; Karen Kopciuk; Dafydd Gwyn Bebb
Purpose Treatment and clinical-outcomes were described in a sub-cohort of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with disease-progression (PD) after epidermal growth factor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (EGFR-TKIs) treatment. Patients and methods We retrospectively analyzed a single-institutional EGFR mutation positive (EGFRmut+) NSCLC cohort for post-TKI-PD management, and assessed overall survival (OS) and post-progression survival (PPS). All de-novo (first lung-cancer occurrence) stage IIIA-IV patients, as well as de-novo stage IV subset was analyzed. Multi-state modeling (MSM) and a Cox PH regression model with propensity score weights adjusted for clinicopathological variables between: diagnosis and PD and PD to death. Results 123 stage IIIA-IV patients were identified with 104 meeting RECIST-1.1-PD criteria. This RECIST-1.1-PD criteria subset included females (64.6%), Asians (39.4%), never/non-smokers (55.8%), and exon 19 deletion carriers (44.2%). Commonest treatment beyond initial-PD was continuing TKI alone (46/104), with another 21 patients continuing TKI plus additional systemic therapy. The median OS for patients who continued TKI treatment at initial-PD was 21.1 months versus 15.6 months for patients who discontinued TKI, p = 0.006. Via MSM analysis, continuing TKI at initial-PD followed by other systemic therapy was associated with an 83% reduced death risk, adjusted HR: 0.17 (95% CI: 0.07, 0.39). In the Cox PH model, ever-smokers with an exon 19 deletion had increased risk of death after PD (adjusted HR: 3.19, 95% CI: 1.54, 6.58), as did exon 21 mutation carriers, (adjusted HR: 2.10, 95% CI: 1.10, 4.00) and females (adjusted HR: 3.19, 95% CI: 1.54, 6.58). Conclusion Subsequent systemic therapy after continuing TKI at initial-PD reduced the risk of death. Additionally, our data suggest that positive smoking history increases death risk for some EGFR mutation types and females.
Mental Health and Physical Activity | 2018
Jeff K. Vallance; Gwyn Bebb; Terry Boyle; Steven T. Johnson; Paula Gardiner; A. D'Silva
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2018
A. Gibson; A. D'Silva; R. Tudor; A. Elegbede; S. Otsuka; G. Bebb; Desiree Hao
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2018
Michelle Dean; A. Chan; Emeka K. Enwere; H. Li; A. Gibson; A. D'Silva; A. Elegbede; R. Tudor; S. Otsuka; Don Morris; G. Bebb
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2018
A. Gibson; H. Li; A. D'Silva; R. Tudor; A. Elegbede; S. Otsuka; Winson Y. Cheung; G. Bebb
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2018
A. Elegbede; H. Li; A. D'Silva; A. Gibson; R. Tudor; Michelle Dean; S. Otsuka; G. Bebb
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2018
A. Gibson; H. Li; A. D'Silva; R. Tudor; A. Elegbede; S. Otsuka; G. Bebb; Winson Y. Cheung
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2018
A. Fung; Karen Kopciuk; Michelle Dean; A. D'Silva; S. Otsuka; Alexander C. Klimowicz; Desiree Hao; Don Morris; G. Bebb
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2017
A. Elegbede; M. Koebel; A. D'Silva; M. Dean; Emeka K. Enwere; R. Tudor; A. Gibson; H. Li; S. Otsuka; G. Bebb
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2017
A. Gibson; R. Tudor; A. D'Silva; A. Elegbede; S. Otsuka; H. Li; G. Bebb; Winson Y. Cheung