1. Primary radiotherapy or postoperative radiotherapy in patients with head and neck cancer: Comparative analysis of inflammation-based prognostic scoring systems.
- Author
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Selzer E, Grah A, Heiduschka G, Kornek G, and Thurnher D
- Subjects
- Austria epidemiology, Comorbidity, Disease-Free Survival, Female, Head and Neck Neoplasms diagnosis, Humans, Inflammation diagnosis, Male, Middle Aged, Postoperative Period, Prevalence, Radiotherapy, Adjuvant mortality, Reproducibility of Results, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Sensitivity and Specificity, Survival Rate, Chemoradiotherapy mortality, Head and Neck Neoplasms mortality, Head and Neck Neoplasms therapy, Inflammation mortality, Inflammation therapy, Proportional Hazards Models, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Introduction: Inflammation-based scoring systems have potential value in evaluating the prognosis of cancer patients; however, detailed comparative analyses in well-characterized head and neck cancer patient collectives are missing., Methods: We analyzed overall survival (OS) in locally advanced head and neck cancer patients who were treated with curative intent by primary radiotherapy (RT) alone, by RT in combination with cetuximab (RIT) or with cisplatin (RCHT), and by primary surgery followed by postoperative radiotherapy (PORT). The primary RT collective (N = 170) was analyzed separately from the surgery plus RT group (N = 148). OS was estimated using the Kaplan-Meyer method. Cox proportional-hazard regression models were applied to compare the risk of death among patients stratified according to risk factors and the inflammation-based Glasgow Prognostic Score (GPS), the modified GPS (mGPS), the neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR), the platelet-lymphocyte ratio (PLR), and the prognostic index (PI)., Results: A prognostic relevance of the scoring systems for OS was observed in the primarily irradiated, but not in the PORT collective. OS was 35.5, 18.8, and 15.4 months, respectively, according to GPS 0, 1, and 2. OS according to mGPS 0-2 was identical. The PLR scoring system was not of prognostic relevance, while OS was 27.3 months in the NLR 0 group and 17.3 months in the NLR 1 group. OS was 35.5 months in PI 0, 16.1 months in PI 1, and 22.6 months in PI 2., Conclusion: GPS/mGPS scoring systems are able to discriminate between three risk groups in primarily, but not postoperatively irradiated locally advanced head and neck cancer patients.
- Published
- 2015
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