Mohammadi Mohammad, Cao Yang, Glimelius Ingrid, Bottai Matteo, Eloranta Sandra, Smedby Karin E
Division of Epidemiology, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Institute of Environmental Medicine, Unit of Biostatistics, Division of Epidemiology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
BMC Cancer. 2015 Nov 5;15:850. doi: 10.1186/s12885-015-1857-x.
Comorbidity increases overall mortality in patients diagnosed with hematological malignancies. The impact of comorbidity on cancer-specific mortality, taking competing risks into account, has not been evaluated.
Using the Swedish Cancer Register, we identified patients aged >18 years with a first diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML, N = 2,550), chronic myeloid leukemia (CML, N = 1,000) or myeloma (N = 4,584) 2002-2009. Comorbid disease history was assessed through in- and out-patient care as defined in the Charlson comorbidity index. Mortality rate ratios (MRR) were estimated through 2012 using Poisson regression. Probabilities of cancer-specific death were computed using flexible parametric survival models.
Comorbidity was associated with increased all-cause as well as cancer-specific mortality (cancer-specific MRR: AML = 1.27, 95 % CI: 1.15-1.40; CML = 1.28, 0.96-1.70; myeloma = 1.17, 1.08-1.28) compared with patients without comorbidity. Disorders associated with higher cancer-specific mortality were renal disease (in patients with AML, CML and myeloma), cerebrovascular conditions, dementia, psychiatric disease (AML, myeloma), liver and rheumatic disease (AML), cardiovascular and pulmonary disease (myeloma). The difference in the probability of cancer-specific death, comparing patients with and without comorbidity, was largest among AML patients <70 years, whereas in myeloma the difference did not vary by age among the elderly. The probability of cancer-specific death was generally higher than other-cause death even in older age groups, irrespective of comorbidity.
Comorbidities associated with organ failure or cognitive function are associated with poorer prognosis in several hematological malignancies, likely due to lower treatment tolerability. The results highlight the need for a better balance between treatment toxicity and efficacy in comorbid and elderly AML, CML and myeloma patients.
合并症会增加血液系统恶性肿瘤患者的总体死亡率。尚未评估合并症在考虑竞争风险的情况下对癌症特异性死亡率的影响。
利用瑞典癌症登记处的数据,我们确定了2002年至2009年间首次诊断为急性髓系白血病(AML,N = 2550)、慢性髓系白血病(CML,N = 1000)或骨髓瘤(N = 4584)且年龄大于18岁的患者。通过门诊和住院治疗评估合并症病史,按照查尔森合并症指数进行定义。使用泊松回归估计至2012年的死亡率比值(MRR)。使用灵活的参数生存模型计算癌症特异性死亡的概率。
与无合并症的患者相比,合并症与全因死亡率以及癌症特异性死亡率增加相关(癌症特异性MRR:AML = 1.27,95%CI:1.15 - 1.40;CML = 1.28,0.96 - 1.70;骨髓瘤 = 1.17,1.08 - 1.28)。与较高癌症特异性死亡率相关的疾病包括肾脏疾病(AML、CML和骨髓瘤患者)、脑血管疾病、痴呆、精神疾病(AML、骨髓瘤)、肝脏和风湿性疾病(AML)、心血管和肺部疾病(骨髓瘤)。比较有合并症和无合并症患者,癌症特异性死亡概率的差异在70岁以下的AML患者中最大,而在骨髓瘤患者中,老年人的差异不随年龄变化。即使在老年人群体中,无论有无合并症,癌症特异性死亡的概率通常都高于其他原因导致的死亡。
与器官衰竭或认知功能相关的合并症与几种血液系统恶性肿瘤的预后较差有关,可能是由于治疗耐受性较低。结果强调在合并症患者以及老年AML、CML和骨髓瘤患者中,需要在治疗毒性和疗效之间取得更好的平衡。