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Prognostic model for overall survival of head and neck cancer patients in the palliative phase.

Authors :
Hoesseini A
Sewnaik A
van den Besselaar BN
Zhang J
van Leeuwen N
Hardillo JA
Baatenburg de Jong RJ
Offerman MPJ
Source :
BMC palliative care [BMC Palliat Care] 2024 Feb 24; Vol. 23 (1), pp. 54. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Feb 24.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Background: Patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) enter the palliative phase when cure is no longer possible or when they refuse curative treatment. The mean survival is five months, with a range of days until years. Realistic prognostic counseling enables patients to make well-considered end-of-life choices. However, physicians tend to overestimate survival. The aim of this study was to develop a prognostic model that calculates the overall survival (OS) probability of palliative HNSCC patients.<br />Methods: Patients diagnosed with incurable HNSCC or patients who refused curative treatment for HNSCC between January 1st 2006 and June 3rd 2019 were included (n = 659). Three patients were lost to follow-up. Patients were considered to have incurable HNSCC due to tumor factors (e.g. inoperability with no other curative treatment options, distant metastasis) or patient factors (e.g. the presence of severe comorbidity and/or poor performance status).Tumor and patients factors accounted for 574 patients. An additional 82 patients refused curative treatment and were also considered palliative. The effect of 17 candidate predictors was estimated in the univariable cox proportional hazard regression model. Using backwards selection with a cut-off P-value < 0.10 resulted in a final multivariable prediction model. The C-statistic was calculated to determine the discriminative performance of the model. The final model was internally validated using bootstrapping techniques.<br />Results: A total of 647 patients (98.6%) died during follow-up. Median OS time was 15.0 weeks (95% CI: 13.5;16.6). Of the 17 candidate predictors, seven were included in the final model: the reason for entering the palliative phase, the number of previous HNSCC, cT, cN, cM, weight loss in the 6 months before diagnosis, and the WHO performance status. The internally validated C-statistic was 0.66 indicating moderate discriminative ability. The model showed some optimism, with a shrinkage factor of 0.89.<br />Conclusion: This study enabled the development and internal validation of a prognostic model that predicts the OS probability in HNSCC patients in the palliative phase. This model facilitates personalized prognostic counseling in the palliative phase. External validation and qualitative research are necessary before widespread use in patient counseling and end-of-life care.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1472-684X
Volume :
23
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC palliative care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38395897
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-023-01325-y