| Literature DB >> 27732958 |
Hong-Bo Yang1, Meng Xing1, Lei-Na Ma1, Ling-Xin Feng1, Zhuang Yu1.
Abstract
SETTING: For now, hematological markers of inflammatory response have emerged as prognostic factors for patients with cancer. Many articles have confirm that neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio(NLR) and platelet-lymphocyte ratio (PLR) are relate with poor prognosis in various types of tumors.Entities:
Keywords: NLR; OS; PLR; clinicopathologic parameters; lung cancers
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27732958 PMCID: PMC5363548 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.12526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Flow chart demonstrating process of study selection
Characteristics of all the studies included in the meta-analysis
| Reference, year | Country | Nos. | HR | Design (period) | No of Patients(M/F) | TNM stage | Histology | NLR cut-off | PLR cut-off | Treatment | Prognosticvalue analyses | Survival outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Korea | 6 | U/M | Retrospective | 199 (17/182) | III–IV | NSCLC | 3.25 | NR | C | NLR | OS and PFS | |
| Spain | U/M | Retrospective | 171 (143/28) | IV | NSCLC | 5 | NR | C | NLR | OS and PFS | ||
| China | U/M | Retrospective | 182 (63/119) | III–IV | NSCLC | 2.63 | NR | C | NLR | OS and PFS | ||
| Korea | U/M | Retrospective | 187 (162/25) | I–IV | SCLC | 4 | 160 | C | NLR PLR | OS and PFS | ||
| UK | U/M | Retrospective | 220 (110/110) | I–III | NSCLC | 5 | 300 | S/C | NLR PLR | OS and PFS | ||
| China | U/M | Retrospective | 366 (246/120) | III–IV | NSCLC | 2.68 | 119.5 | NR | NLR PLR | OS and PFS | ||
| Turkey | 7 | U/M | Retrospective | 145 (130/15) | I–IV | NSCLC | NR | 198.2 | S/C | PLR | OS | |
| China | 7 | U/M | Retrospective | 400 (272/128) | I–II | NSCLC | 2.6 | 200 | S | NLR PLR | OS and DFS | |
| Turkey | 6 | M | Retrospective | 299 (270/29) | I–IV | NSCLC | 5 | NR | NR | NLR | OS | |
| China | 7 | U/M | Retrospective | 81 (47/34) | NR | NSCLC | 3.5 | NR | TKIs | NLR | OS and PFS | |
| China | 6 | M | Retrospective | 114 (89/25) | NR | SCLC | 3 | NR | S/C | NLR | OS | |
| Japan | U/M | Retrospective | 334 (213/121) | I–III | NSCLC | 2.5 | NR | S | NLR | OS and DFS | ||
| USA | 7 | U/M | Retrospective | 1139 (602/537) | I–III | NSCLC | 5 | NR | S/C | NLR | OS and RFS | |
| Turkey | 6 | U/M | Retrospective | 138 (124/14) | I–IV | NSCLC | 3.24 | NR | S/C | NLR | OS | |
| Japan | 7 | U/M | Retrospective | 361 (114/152) | I–III | NSCLC | 2.5 | NR | S | NLR | OS and RFS | |
| China | 8 | U | Retrospective | 678 (449/229) | NR | NSCLC | 2.3 | 106 | S | NLR PLR | OS and DFS | |
| China | 7 | U/M | Retrospective | 1238 (812/426) | I–III | NSCLC | 2.3 | NR | S/C | NLR | OS and DFS |
Chemotherapy, DFS disease-free survival, HR hazard ratio, NR not reported, NLR neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, OS overall survival, PLR platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio, PFS progression free survival, S surgery, TNM tumor, node, metastasis classification system.
Figure 2Forest plots of HNLR versus LNLR with OS of all patients in all studies
HNLR high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, LNLR low neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, OS overall survival.
Figure 3Forest plots of HNLR versus LNLR with PFS of all patients in studies
HNLR high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte, LNLR low neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, PFS progression free survival.
Subgroup analyses
| Subgroup | HR (95% CI) | P for subgroup difference | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RE | FE | RE | FE | ||||||
| 0.96 | 0.05 | ||||||||
| < 3 | 7 | 1.23 (1.19,1.28) | < 0.00001 | 1.23 (1.19,1.28) | < 0.00001 | 0% | 0.65 | ||
| 3–4 | 6 | 1.22 (1.13,1.32) | < 0.00001 | 1.22 (1.13,1.32) | < 0.00001 | 6% | 0.38 | ||
| NLR ≥ 5 | 5 | 1.21 (1.03,1.42) | 0.02 | 1.13 (1.06,1.20) | 0.0003 | 80% | < 0.00001 | ||
| 0.07 | 0.07 | ||||||||
| Chemotherapy | 5 | 1.20 (1.12,1.29) | < 0.00001 | 1.10 (1.04,1.17) | 0.002 | 0% | 0.88 | ||
| surgery | 5 | 1.31 (1.23,1.41) | < 0.00001 | 1.31 (1.23,1.41) | < 0.00001 | 0% | 0.50 | ||
| 0.11 | 0.03 | ||||||||
| NSCLC | 14 | 1.24 (1.20,1.28) | < 0.00001 | 1.24 (1.20,1.28) | < 0.00001 | 2% | 0.43 | ||
| SCLC | 4 | 1.15 (1.06,1.25) | 0.0010 | 1.14 (1.07,1.22) | < 0.0001 | 35% | 0.20 | ||
| 0.53 | 0.50 | ||||||||
| Easterncountries | 15 | 1.22 (1.17,1.27) | < 0.00001 | 1.21 (1.18,1.25) | < 0.00001 | 23% | 0.20 | ||
| Westren countries | 3 | 1.28 (1.11,1.48)) | 0.0006 | 1.25 (1.15,1.37) | < 0.00001 | 49% | 0.14 | ||
FE fixed-effect model, HR hazard ratio, RE random-effect model, NSCLC non small cell lung cancer, N number, NLR neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, SCLC small cell lung cancer.
Figure 4Forest plots of HPLR versus LPLR with OS of all patients in studies and subgroups of patients who are NSCLC or SCLC
HNLR high neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, LNLR low neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio NSCLC non small cell lung cancer, OS overall survival SCLC small cell lung cancer.
Figure 5Forest plots of PLR ≥ 200 versus PLR < 200 with OS of NSCLC
HPLR high platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio, LPLR low platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio, OS overall survival, NSCLC non small cell lung cancer.
Associations between NLR and clinicopathologic parameters
| Parameter | Study no. [references] | No. of patients | OR (95% CI, | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Invasive tumor (T3–4) | 3 | 719 | 1.54 (1.13–2.09,0.006) | 16% (0.30) |
| Lymph node Metastasis) (N2-3) | 4 | 1243 | 1.47 (1.09–1.97,0.01) | 0% (0.56) |
| Poor differentiation | 4 | 1053 | 1.72 (1.30–2.29,0.0002) | 0% (0.71) |
| Vascular invasion | 2 | 695 | 1.70 (1.21–2.40,0.002) | 61% (0.11) |
| Tumor Stage (IV) | 3 | 686 | 0.92 (0.65–1.32,0.66) | 61% (0.08) |
OR odds ratio.