Singh B, Bhaya M, Zimbler M, Stern J, Roland J T, Rosenfeld R M, Har-El G, Lucente F E
Department of Otolaryngology, State University of New York Health Science Center at Brooklyn, The Long Island College Hospital, 11201, USA.
Head Neck. 1998 Jan;20(1):1-7. doi: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0347(199801)20:1<1::aid-hed1>3.0.co;2-8.
Comorbid conditions have a significant impact on the actuarial survival of patients with head and neck cancer. However, no studies have evaluated the impact of comorbidity on tumor- and treatment-specific outcomes. This study was performed to evaluate the impact of comorbidity, graded by the Kaplan-Feinstein comorbidity index (KFI) on the incidence and severity of complications, disease-free interval, and tumor-specific survival in patients undergoing curative treatment for head and neck cancer.
A multi-institutional, retrospective cohort of 70 patients 45 years of age and under with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) presenting over an 11-year period was studied.
Advanced comorbidity (KFI grade 2 or 3) was present in 21 patients (30%). Patients with advanced comorbidity did not differ from patients with low-level comorbidity (KFI grades 0 or 1) in sex distribution, race, presence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, tobacco use, location of primary lesion, stage at presentation, pathologic differentiation of the tumor, or type of initial treatment. The overall incidence of treatment-associated complications was similar between the groups (57% versus 49%; p > 0.05), but a higher proportion of patients with advanced comorbidity developed high-grade complications (24% versus 6%; p = .04). The median disease-free interval (11.1 months versus 21.6 months; p = .045) and tumor-specific survival (13.7 months versus 57.6 months; p = .03) was poorer for patients with advanced comorbidity. The effects of comorbidity on survival remained significant even after adjusting for the confounding effects of HIV status and tumor stage (p = .05).
The presence of comorbid conditions has a significant impact on tumor- and treatment-specific outcomes. Although the presence of advanced comorbid conditions is not associated with an increase in the rate of treatment-associated complications, complications tend to be more severe in this population. More importantly, advanced comorbidity has a detrimental effect on the disease-free interval and tumor-specific survival in patients with head and neck cancer, independent of other factors. This suggests that comorbidity may impact on tumor behavior, presumably by altering the host's response to cancer. Accordingly, to be more predictive and reliable, the current staging system for head and neck cancer should include a description of the patient's comorbidity.
合并症对头颈部癌患者的精算生存率有重大影响。然而,尚无研究评估合并症对肿瘤及治疗特异性结局的影响。本研究旨在评估采用卡普兰 - 费因斯坦合并症指数(KFI)分级的合并症对头颈部癌根治性治疗患者并发症的发生率和严重程度、无病间期及肿瘤特异性生存的影响。
对一个多机构的回顾性队列进行研究,该队列包括11年间出现的70例年龄在45岁及以下的头颈部鳞状细胞癌(SCC)患者。
21例患者(30%)存在严重合并症(KFI 2级或3级)。严重合并症患者与轻度合并症患者(KFI 0级或1级)在性别分布、种族、人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染情况、吸烟情况、原发灶位置、就诊时分期、肿瘤病理分化程度或初始治疗类型方面无差异。两组治疗相关并发症的总体发生率相似(57%对49%;p>0.05),但严重合并症患者发生高级别并发症的比例更高(24%对6%;p = 0.04)。严重合并症患者的无病间期(11.1个月对21.6个月;p = 0.045)和肿瘤特异性生存(13.7个月对57.6个月;p = 0.03)较差。即使在调整了HIV状态和肿瘤分期的混杂效应后,合并症对生存的影响仍然显著(p = 0.05)。
合并症的存在对肿瘤及治疗特异性结局有重大影响。虽然严重合并症的存在与治疗相关并发症发生率的增加无关,但该人群的并发症往往更严重。更重要的是,严重合并症对头颈部癌患者的无病间期和肿瘤特异性生存有不利影响,且独立于其他因素。这表明合并症可能影响肿瘤行为,推测是通过改变宿主对癌症的反应。因此,为了更具预测性和可靠性,当前的头颈部癌分期系统应包括对患者合并症的描述。