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合并症的不同预后影响。

Differential prognostic impact of comorbidity.

作者信息

Read William L, Tierney Ryan M, Page Nathan C, Costas Irene, Govindan Ramaswamy, Spitznagel Edward L J, Piccirillo Jay F

机构信息

Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 S Euclid Ave, Campus Box 8115, St Louis, MO 63110, USA.

出版信息

J Clin Oncol. 2004 Aug 1;22(15):3099-103. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2004.08.040.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Cancer patients with concurrent comorbid conditions have worse outcomes than patients with no comorbidities. We hypothesized that the prognostic impact of comorbidities would be greatest for patients with cancers associated with a long natural history and least in patients with aggressive cancers.

PATIENTS AND METHODS

Using the Barnes-Jewish Hospital Oncology Data Services cancer registry, we grouped 11,558 patients with breast, lung, colon, or prostate cancer by morphologic stage at diagnosis and then determined the 1-year overall survival rate for each group. Overall, severity of comorbidity was assessed from chart review and classified into one of four groups: none, mild, moderate, or severe. The relative prognostic impact of comorbidity was measured by the hazard ratio and adjusted for the prognostic impact of age, race, and sex.

RESULTS

One-year overall survival rate ranged from 20% for 1,005 patients with distant spread of lung cancer to 98% for 3,325 patients with localized prostate cancer. Adjusted hazard ratio of moderate/severe comorbidity (relative to none/mild) ranged from 1.04 to 4.48. The correlation between overall survival rate and severity of comorbidity was statistically significant (r2 = 0.56; P < .001). The proportion of variance in outcome explained by comorbidity ranged from less than 1% to almost 9%, depending on tumor site and stage.

CONCLUSION

Concurrent comorbidities had the greatest prognostic impact among groups with the highest survival rate and the least impact in groups with the lowest survival rate. These findings can be used to help determine the role comorbidity information should play in studies of cancer outcomes.

摘要

目的

合并有其他疾病的癌症患者比没有合并症的患者预后更差。我们假设,对于自然病程较长的癌症患者,合并症的预后影响最大,而对于侵袭性癌症患者,合并症的影响最小。

患者与方法

利用巴恩斯-犹太医院肿瘤数据服务癌症登记处的数据,我们根据诊断时的形态学分期对11558例乳腺癌、肺癌、结肠癌或前列腺癌患者进行分组,然后确定每组的1年总生存率。总体而言,通过病历审查评估合并症的严重程度,并将其分为四组之一:无、轻度、中度或重度。合并症的相对预后影响通过风险比来衡量,并对年龄、种族和性别的预后影响进行了调整。

结果

1年总生存率范围从1005例有远处转移的肺癌患者的20%到3325例局限性前列腺癌患者的98%。中度/重度合并症(相对于无/轻度)的调整后风险比范围为1.04至4.48。总生存率与合并症严重程度之间的相关性具有统计学意义(r2 = 0.56;P < .001)。根据肿瘤部位和分期,合并症所解释的结局变异比例范围从不到1%到近9%。

结论

合并症在生存率最高的组中预后影响最大,而在生存率最低的组中影响最小。这些发现可用于帮助确定合并症信息在癌症结局研究中应发挥的作用。

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