| Literature DB >> 28893236 |
Cédric Panje1, Oliver Riesterer1, Christoph Glanzmann1, Gabriela Studer2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Volumetric tumor staging has been shown as superior prognostic tool compared to the conventional TNM system in patients undergoing definitive intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) for head and neck cancer. Recently, clinical immunoscores such as the neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) have been investigated as prognostic markers in several tumor entities. The aim of this study was to assess the combined prognostic value of NLR and tumor volume in patients treated with IMRT for oropharyngeal cancer (OC).Entities:
Keywords: Head and neck cancer; IMRT; NLR; Neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio; Oropharyngeal cancer; Radiotherapy; Volumetric staging
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28893236 PMCID: PMC5594523 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-017-3590-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Patient and treatment characteristics
| Parameter | |
|---|---|
| Age | median 61.6 years (range 36.9–91.4) |
| Gender | 72% male ( |
| Histology | 100% squamous cell carcinoma |
| Oropharyngeal subsite | 52% tonsil ( |
| T stage (UICC 7th edition) | 12% T1 ( |
| N stage (UICC 7th edition) | 16% N0 ( |
| UICC Stage (7th edition) | 8% Stage II ( |
| ECOG performance score | 80% ECOG 0 ( |
| Tumor volume (combined nodal and primary volume); | median 40 cm3 (range 3–216 cm3); overall 52 events |
| Smoking status | active = 62% ( |
| NLR | median 3.33 (range 0.91–33.71) |
| IMRT dose prescription | median 69.6 Gy (66–72 Gy) |
| Concomitant systemic therapy | 42% cisplatin weekly ( |
| Induction chemotherapy | 8% of patients ( |
| Follow-up | median 61.2 months (range 1.7–169) |
Fig. 1Correlation analysis demonstrates a statistically significant correlation between neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and total tumor volume (p = 0.0059, rho = 0.20)
Fig. 2Recurrence-free survival and overall survival is significantly affected by tumor volume group (a-b) and elevated NLR (> = 4.68) c-d
Fig. 3Stratification for NLR in different tumor volume groups. Patients with elevated NLR (> = 4.68) showed a significantly reduced recurrence-free survival in all tumor volume groups as well as inferior overall survival in the intermediate and high-tumor volume group (a-b: <15 cm3, c-d: 15-70 cm3, e-f: >70 cm3). NLR resulted in an additional statistically significant prognostic differentiation of the volumetric cohorts with respect to RFS and OS rates (except of the ‘small tumor volume’ cohort with only 4 events, Fig. 3b)
Prognostic value of the NLR in different tumor volume risk groups. Cut-off for the NLR was 4.68
| 3-year recurrence-free survival | 3-year overall survival | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High NLR | Low NLR | Hazard ratio |
| High NLR | Low NLR | Hazard ratio |
| |
| Small tumor volume (< 15 cm3) | 60% | 95% | 8.16 |
| 75% | 90% | 0.95 | 0.964 |
| Intermediate tumor volume (15–70 cm3) | 53% | 80% | 2.77 |
| 68% | 82% | 1.95 | 0.052 |
| High tumor volume (>70 cm3) | 28% | 74% | 5.04 |
| 33% | 84% | 4.16 |
|
Univariate Analysis for recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS)
| RFS | OS | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR | Conf. int. |
| HR | Conf. int. |
| |
| Age | 1.001 | 0.9729–1.03 | 0.942 | 1.018 | 0.9932–1.043 | 0.157 |
| Sex | 0.7161 | 0.3755–1.366 | 0.308 | 0.755 | 0.4312–1.321 | 0.323 |
| Normal ECOG | 0.3812 | 0.213–0.6823 |
| 0.333 | 0.2009–0.5518 |
|
| UICC stage | 1.14 | 0.6254–2.079 | 0.668 | 1.163 | 0.6781–1.996 | 0.582 |
| No smoking history | 0.2293 | 0.05573–0.9431 |
| 0.314 | 0.1142–0.8635 |
|
| Chemotherapy | 0.5653 | 0.3158–1.012 | 0.052 | 0.555 | 0.335–0.9195 |
|
| Tumor volume | 1.015 | 1.008–1.021 |
| 1.011 | 1.005–1.017 |
|
| NLR | 4.059 | 2.315–7.117 |
| 2.311 | 1.438–3.714 |
|
Multivariate analysis for recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS)
| RFS | OS | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR | Conf. int. |
| HR | Conf. int. |
| |
| Normal ECOG | 0.5212 | 0.28515 | 0.521 | 0.4027 | 0.2384 |
|
| No smoking history | 0.4191 | 0.09899 | 0.237 | 0.4887 | 0.1733 | 0.176 |
| Chemotherapy | 0.9337 | 0.50318 | 0.828 | 0.8130 | 0.4757 | 0.449 |
| Tumor volume | 1.0111 | 1.00454 |
| 1.0077 | 1.0016 |
|
| NLR | 3.0218 | 1.67305 |
| 1.7333 | 1.0462 |
|
Summary of studies investigating the prognostic role of the neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) in oropharyngeal cancer (OC)
| Study | Cohort and treatment | NLR cut-off | Results | p16 status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rachidi et al. [ |
| 4.39 (upper tertile) | - Increased mortality for high NLR (HR = 2.39) | yes (89/543) |
| Charles et al. [ |
| 5.0 (based on review [ | - High NLR associated in OC with inferior OS (HR = 4.6) and RFS (HR = 3.01) | yes (95/145) |
| Kano et al. [ |
| 1.92 (based on ROC analysis) | - High NLR associated with inferior OS and DFS, but not significant on multivariate analysis | no |
| Valero et al. [ |
| 1.35 and 3.86 (three groups based on RPA) | - High NLR associated with inferior DSS | yes (125/824) |
| Selzer et al. [ |
| 5.0 | - High NLR associated with inferior median OS (17 vs. 27 months) | no |
| Moon et al. [ |
| not described | - High NLR associated with inferior PFS (HR = 2.20) and OS (HR = 3.22) | no |
| Huang et al. [ |
| not applied (neutrophils and lymphocytes were analyzed separately) | - High neutrophils and low lymphocytes are associated with inferior prognosis | yes (all) |
| Young et al. [ |
| 5.0 | - High NLR associated with inferior locoregional control (HR = 2.072) | no |
HNSCC squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck, pts. patients, ROC receiver-operating characteristic, RPA recursive partitioning analysis, OS Overall survival, PFS progression-free survival, DFS disease-free survival, DSS disease-specific survival