Clinical relevance and prognostic value of inflammatory biomarkers: A prospective study in terminal cancer patients receiving palliative care
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
J Pain Symptom Manage
Abstract
Inflammatory biomarkers have prognostic value in cancer patients, but the feasibility of their use with terminal can cer patients and the related cutoff points are poorly explored.
Objectives. To describe the percentiles values of inflammatory biomarkers; to identify their cutoff points in relation to death;
and to determine the prognostic value of C-reactive protein (CRP), leukocytes, neutrophils, neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio
(NLR), CRP/albumin ratio (CAR), and modified Glasgow Prognostic Score for death within 90 days, in terminal cancer patients
receiving palliative care.
Methods. Prospective cohort study that included patients who received palliative care at the Palliative Care Unit of the
National Cancer Institute (Brazil) between October 2019 and March 2020. Receiver operating characteristic curves were used
to identify the optimal cutoff points of the inflammatory biomarkers for the prediction of death in 90 days. Kaplan-Meier curves
and Cox regression were used to verify the prognostic value of these cutoff points and concordance statistic (C-statistic) was
used to test their predictive accuracy.
Results. A total 205 patients (mean age: 62.5 years; female: 59%) were included in the study. The optimal cutoff points were
CRP ≥6.7mg/L, CAR ≥2.0, leukocytes ≥9300/mL, neutrophils ≥7426/mL and NLR ≥6.0. All biomarkers showed prognostic
value and good predictive accuracy when their cutoff points were used, especially CAR, which presented excellent discrimina tion power (C-statistic: 0.80).
Conclusion. The inflammatory biomarkers analyzed are independent predictive factors for death within 90 days in terminal
cancer patients
Description
p. 978-986.: il. p&b.
Citation
OLIVEIRA, Livia Costa de et al. Clinical relevance and prognostic value of inflammatory biomarkers: A prospective study in terminal cancer patients receiving palliative care. J Pain Symptom Manage, v. 62, n. 5, p. 978-986, nov. 2021.