Prognostic value of systemic inflammation-modified Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment in advanced cancers: A large-scale retrospective cohort study.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Ge Song, Tingting Dai, Yu Min, Haohan Fan, Xuemei Li, Zheran Liu, Qian Yang, Rong Jia, Qiwei Yang, Xiaolin Hu, Yonglin Su, Jitao Zhou
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Abstract

Background: A tight association between systemic inflammation and nutritional status has been established. We aim to evaluate the prognostic role of systemic inflammation-modified Patient-Generated Subjective Global Assessment (PG-SGA) criteria in advanced cancers.

Method: In this retrospective study, patients with advanced cancers were included from the West China Hospital between Nov 2019 and Sep 2023. Five systemic inflammatory indicators were selected, including the systemic inflammatory index (SII), neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR), platelet to lymphocyte ratio (PLR), lymphocyte to monocyte ratio (LMR), and advanced lung cancer inflammation index (ALI). Nutritional status was evaluated by the PG-SGA criteria. Kaplan-Meier curves, restricted cubic splines (RCS), and Cox regression analyses were used to estimate the effects of inflammation-modified PG-SGA index on the survival of cancer patients.

Results: In total, there were 1,065 patients with advanced cancers included in our study. The ALI showed better predictive power in predicting the all-cause mortality of patients with advanced cancers when compared with other systemic inflammation indicators (4th quartile: hazard ratio (HR) = 0.38, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.29, 0.50, P < 0.001). The ALI-modified PG-SGA index showed the best survival prediction value in patients with advanced cancers, with an AUC of ROC of 0.68 for 365-day mortality, 0.65 for 730-day mortality, and 0.64 for 1,300-day survival prediction, respectively. The C-index (0.626), calibration curves, and decision curve analysis validated the promising predictive accuracy of the PG-SGA/ALI index in predicting the all-cause mortality of patients with advanced cancers. The sensitive analyses also supported the consistent findings as we determined in the main regression.

Conclusions: The findings highlight that considering the host systemic inflammation status during the nutrition assessment would bring additional benefits to the survival prediction of advanced cancers. The PG-SGA/ALI index has moderate predictive value compared to the original PG-SGA criteria in the survival prediction of patients with advanced cancers. The PG-SGA/ALI index would be an optimal biomarker for precise survival prediction in cancer patients in clinical practice.

一项大规模回顾性队列研究:系统性炎症修饰的患者主观总体评估在晚期癌症中的预后价值。
背景:全身性炎症与营养状况密切相关。我们的目的是评估系统性炎症修饰的患者主观整体评估(PG-SGA)标准在晚期癌症中的预后作用。方法:回顾性研究纳入2019年11月至2023年9月华西医院晚期肿瘤患者。选取5项全身炎症指标,包括全身炎症指数(SII)、中性粒细胞与淋巴细胞比值(NLR)、血小板与淋巴细胞比值(PLR)、淋巴细胞与单核细胞比值(LMR)和晚期肺癌炎症指数(ALI)。根据PG-SGA标准评估营养状况。采用Kaplan-Meier曲线、限制性三次样条(RCS)和Cox回归分析来估计炎症修饰PG-SGA指数对癌症患者生存的影响。结果:我们的研究共纳入了1065例晚期癌症患者。与其他全身性炎症指标相比,ALI在预测晚期癌症患者全因死亡率方面表现出更好的预测能力(第4四分位数:风险比(HR) = 0.38, 95%可信区间(CI): 0.29, 0.50, P)。结论:研究结果表明,在营养评估中考虑宿主全身性炎症状态将为晚期癌症患者的生存预测带来额外的好处。与最初的PG-SGA标准相比,PG-SGA/ALI指数在预测晚期癌症患者的生存方面具有中等的预测价值。PG-SGA/ALI指数将成为临床准确预测癌症患者生存的最佳生物标志物。
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来源期刊
Supportive Care in Cancer
Supportive Care in Cancer 医学-康复医学
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
9.70%
发文量
751
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Supportive Care in Cancer provides members of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer (MASCC) and all other interested individuals, groups and institutions with the most recent scientific and social information on all aspects of supportive care in cancer patients. It covers primarily medical, technical and surgical topics concerning supportive therapy and care which may supplement or substitute basic cancer treatment at all stages of the disease. Nursing, rehabilitative, psychosocial and spiritual issues of support are also included.
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