| Literature DB >> 31775884 |
Jianqiu Kong1,2, Junjiong Zheng1,2, Jinhua Cai3, Shaoxu Wu1,2, Xiayao Diao1,2, Weibin Xie1,2, Xiong Chen1,2, Chenyi Liao4, Hao Yu1,2, Xinxiang Fan1,2, Chaowen Huang5, Zhuowei Liu5, Wei Chen6, Qiang Lv7, Haide Qin1,2,8, Jian Huang1,2, Tianxin Lin9,10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical outcome of adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) varies because of its heterogeneous nature and reliable prognostic prediction model for adult ACC patients is limited. The objective of this study was to develop and externally validate a nomogram for overall survival (OS) prediction in adult patients with ACC after surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Adrenocortical carcinoma; Adult patients; Decision curve analysis; Multicenter; Nomogram; Overall survival; Surveillance Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER); The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA); Validation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31775884 PMCID: PMC6882048 DOI: 10.1186/s40880-019-0426-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Commun (Lond) ISSN: 2523-3548
Fig. 1Flowchart illustrating patient selection for this study
Baseline characteristics of the investigated patients as per different cohorts (N = 886)
| Characteristics | Training set ( | Internal validation set ( | TCGA validation set ( | Chinese multicenter validation set ( | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | Low risk (%) | High risk (%) | Number of patients | Low risk (%) | High risk (%) | Number of patients | Low risk (%) | High risk (%) | Number of patients | Low risk (%) | High risk (%) | |
| Age, years | ||||||||||||
| Median (IQR) | 54 (20–89) | 55 (20–89) | 61 (27–86) | 52 (20–85) | 55 (20–85) | 59 (34–74) | 50 (20–83) | 48 (20–83) | 59 (23–71) | 49 (19–79) | 48 (19–77) | 61 (49–79) |
| Sex | ||||||||||||
| Male | 146 | 128 (87.7%) | 18 (12.3%) | 133 | 125 (94.0%) | 8 (6.0%) | 28 | 26 (92.9%) | 2 (7.1%) | 38 | 34 (89.5%) | 4 (10.5%) |
| Female | 258 | 232 (89.9%) | 26 (10.1%) | 185 | 169 (91.4%) | 16 (8.6%) | 54 | 47 (87.0%) | 7 (13.0%) | 44 | 42 (95.5%) | 2 (4.5%) |
| Tumor location | ||||||||||||
| Left | 224 | 204 (91.1%) | 20 (8.9%) | 163 | 150 (92.0%) | 13 (8.0%) | 43 | 37 (86.0%) | 6 (14.0%) | 56 | 53 (94.6%) | 3 (5.4%) |
| Right | 180 | 156 (86.7%) | 24 (13.3%) | 155 | 144 (92.9%) | 11 (7.1%) | 39 | 36 (92.3%) | 3 (7.7%) | 26 | 23 (88.5%) | 3 (11.5%) |
| Tumor size, cm | ||||||||||||
| Median (IQR) | 11.0 (1.2–80.0) | 10.7 (1.2–80.0) | 11.8 (2.6–21.0) | 11.0 (1.2–34.0) | 11.0 (1.2–34.0) | 12.3 (1.7–22.5) | – | – | – | 9.1 (0.8–17.8) | 9.5 (0.8–17.8) | 6.5 (4.5–11.1) |
| 7th AJCC T stage | ||||||||||||
| T1 | 26 | 26 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 16 | 16 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 7 | 7 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 6 | 6 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| T2 | 194 | 192 (99.0%) | 2 (1.0%) | 190 | 189 (99.5%) | 1 (0.5%) | 45 | 43 (95.6%) | 2 (4.4%) | 38 | 38 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| T3 | 109 | 90 (82.6%) | 19 (17.4%) | 58 | 49 (84.5%) | 9 (15.5%) | 11 | 10 (90.9%) | 1 (9.1%) | 20 | 19 (95.0%) | 1(5.0%) |
| T4 | 75 | 52 (69.3%) | 23 (30.7%) | 54 | 40 (74.1%) | 14 (25.9%) | 19 | 13 (68.4%) | 6 (31.6%) | 18 | 13 (72.2%) | 5 (17.8%) |
| 7th AJCC N stage | ||||||||||||
| N0 | 371 | 351 (94.6%) | 20 (5.4%) | 290 | 286 (98.6%) | 4 (1.4%) | 73 | 71 (97.3%) | 2 (2.7%) | 74 | 72 (97.3%) | 2 (2.7%) |
| N1 | 33 | 9 (27.3%) | 24 (72.7%) | 28 | 8 (28.6%) | 20 (71.4%) | 9 | 2 (22.2%) | 7 (77.8%) | 8 | 4 (50.0%) | 4 (50.0%) |
| 7th AJCC M stage | ||||||||||||
| M0 | 328 | 319 (97.3%) | 9 (2.7%) | 287 | 277 (96.5%) | 10 (3.6%) | 66 | 66 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 68 | 68 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| M1 | 76 | 41 (53.9%) | 35 (46.1%) | 31 | 17 (54.8%) | 14 (45.2%) | 16 | 7 (43.8%) | 9 (56.2%) | 14 | 8 (57.1%) | 6 (42.9%) |
| 7th AJCC stage group | ||||||||||||
| I | 24 | 24 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 15 | 15 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 7 | 7 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 5 | 5 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| II | 173 | 173 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 176 | 176 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 41 | 41 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 31 | 31 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| III | 83 | 83 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 52 | 52 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 11 | 11 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 22 | 22 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| IV | 124 | 80 (64.5%) | 44 (35.5%) | 75 | 51 (68.0%) | 24 (32.0%) | 23 | 14 (60.9%) | 9 (39.1%) | 24 | 18 (75.0%) | 6 (25.0%) |
| ENSAT stage group | ||||||||||||
| I | 24 | 24 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 15 | 15 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 7 | 7 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 5 | 5 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| II | 173 | 173 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 176 | 176 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 41 | 41 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 31 | 31 (100.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| III | 131 | 122 (93.1%) | 9 (6.9%) | 96 | 86 (89.6%) | 10 (10.4%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| IV | 76 | 41 (53.9%) | 35 (46.1%) | 31 | 15 (48.4%) | 16 (51.6%) | 34 | 25 (73.5%) | 9 (26.5%) | 46 | 40 (87.0%) | 6 (23.0%) |
Data are n or n (%) unless indicated otherwise. The ENSAT staging system was consistent with the 8th AJCC staging system
IQR interquartile range, TCGA the Cancer Genome Atlas, AJCC the American Joint Committee on Cancer, ENSAT European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors
Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses of clinicopathologic factors with overall survival in the SEER training set
| Characteristics | Univariable analyses | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR (95%CI) | HR (95% CI) | HR (95% CI) | HR (95% CI) | |||||
| Age (continuous) | 1.017 (1.008–1.027) | < 0.001* | 1.021 (1.012–1.031) | < 0.001* | 1.018 (1.008–1.027) | < 0.001* | 1.019 (1.009–1.028) | < 0.001* |
| Sex (male | 0.822 (0.617–1.096) | 0.182 | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Tumor location (left | 0.981 (0.742–1.297) | 0.892 | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Tumor size (continuous) | 1.012 (0.993–1.032) | 0.227 | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| 7th AJCC T stage | < 0.001* | < 0.001* | ||||||
| T1 | Reference | Reference | – | – | – | – | – | |
| T2 | 1.521 (0.734–3.154) | 0.260 | 1.544(0.743–3.208) | 0.244 | – | – | – | – |
| T3 | 3.412 (1.636–7.116) | 0.001* | 2.981 (1.428–6.225) | 0.004* | – | – | – | – |
| T4 | 4.364 (2.063–9.233) | < 0.001* | 3.105 (1.454–6.633) | 0.003* | – | – | – | – |
| 7th AJCC N stage (N0 | 3.448 (2.370–5.341) | < 0.001* | 2.789 (1.801–4.319) | < 0.001* | – | – | – | – |
| 7th AJCC M stage (M0 | 2.773 (2.019–3.808) | < 0.001* | 1.970 (1.391–2.791) | < 0.001* | – | – | – | – |
| 7th AJCC TNM stage | < 0.001* | < 0.001* | ||||||
| I | Reference | – | – | Reference | – | – | ||
| II | 1.297 (0.622–2.705) | 0.489 | – | – | 1.196 (0.572–2.498) | 0.634 | – | – |
| III | 2.599 (1.225–5.515) | 0.013* | – | – | 2.375 (1.117–5.049) | 0.025* | – | – |
| IV | 4.097 (1.976–8.498) | < 0.001* | – | – | 3.897 (1.878–8.087) | < 0.001* | – | – |
| ENSAT stage group | < 0.001* | |||||||
| I | Reference | – | – | – | – | Reference | < 0.001* | |
| II | 1.297 (0.622–2.706) | 0.488 | – | – | – | – | 1.191 (0.570–2.489) | 0.642 |
| III | 2.782 (1.339–5.779) | 0.006* | – | – | – | – | 2.545 (1.223–5.299) | 0.013* |
| IV | 4.891 (2.317–10.322) | < 0.001* | – | – | – | – | 4.752 (2.251–10.034) | < 0.001* |
TCGA the Cancer Genome Atlas, AJCC the American Joint Committee on Cancer, ENSAT European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumors, HR Hazard Ratio, CI confidence interval
*P < 0.05
The Cox regression coefficients of the three models of the SEER training set
| Model and variable | Cox regression coefficient |
|---|---|
| Model 1 | |
| Age | 0.0210 |
| 7th AJCC T stage | |
| T1 | Reference |
| T2 | 0.4343 |
| T3 | 1.0923 |
| T4 | 1.1331 |
| 7th AJCC N stage | 1.0257 |
| 7th AJCC M stage | 0.6781 |
| Model 2 | |
| Age | 0.0176 |
| 7th AJCC stage group | |
| I | Reference |
| II | 0.1788 |
| III | 0.8649 |
| IV | 1.3601 |
| Model 3 | |
| Age | 0.0185 |
| ENSAT stage group | |
| I | Reference |
| II | 0.1750 |
| III | 0.9343 |
| IV | 1.5587 |
SEER the Surveillance Epidemiology, and End Results database, AJCC the American Joint Committee on Cancer, ENSAT European Network for the Study of Adrenal Tumor
Performance of models in the SEER training set
| Models | C-index (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | 0.715 (0.679–0.751) | – |
| Model 2 | 0.697 (0.660–0.734) | < 0.001 |
| Model 3 | 0.698 (0.662–0.734) | < 0.001 |
*P values were obtained by comparing model 1 with model 2 and model 3, respectively
Fig. 2The formulated nomogram and its calibration plots. a This nomogram enables the prognostication of the 1-, 3- and 5-year estimates of the OS of ACC patients after surgery. Calibration plots of the nomogram performed in the b SEER training, c SEER internal validation, d the TCGA validation and e the Chinese multicenter validation set, respectively. Nomogram-predicted OS is plotted on the x-axis; actual OS is plotted on the y-axis. Dots represent nomogram-predicted probabilities. An ideal prediction would correspond to the diagonal 45° gray line slope of b–e. The score range of the nomogram is 0 to 29.3. OS overall survival, ACC adrenocortical carcinoma, SEER the Surveillance Epidemiology, and End Results database, TCGA the Cancer Genome Atlas set
Fig. 3X-tile plots to identify the optimal risk score cutoff based on OS in the SEER training set. a X-tile plot for the training set. The X-tile plot was generated by dividing risk scores into three populations (low, middle and high) or two populations (low and high). Each pixel (point) of the X-tile plot represents the data from a given set of divisions. The X-axis represents all potential risk score cutoff from low to high (left to right) that define a low subset, whereas the Y-axis represents risk score cutoff value from high to low (top to bottom), that define a high subset. The arrows represent the direction in which the low subset (X-axis) and the high subset (Y-axis) increase in size. Data along the hypotenuse represent results from a single cutoff value that divides the data into high or low subsets. The coloration of the plot represents the strength of the association at each division, ranging from low (dark, black) to high (bright, red or green). Inverse associations between the risk score and survival are colored red, whereas direct associations are colored green. b The distributions of the number of patients by risk score. c Kaplan–Meier plots categorized by the low-risk and high-risk groups according to the optimal risk score cutoff. The optimal OS risk score cutoff was determined as 2.96 (χ2 = 97.7, P < 0.001)
Fig. 4Kaplan–Meier survival curves categorized into low-risk and high-risk groups. Kaplan–Meier survival curves of OS in a training, b SEER internal validation; c TCGA validation; d Chinese multicenter validation set; e entire cohort of enrolled ACC patients. OS overall survival, ACC adrenocortical carcinoma, SEER the Surveillance Epidemiology, and End Results database, TCGA the Cancer Genome Atlas set
Fig. 5Kaplan–Meier survival curves categorized into low-risk and high-risk groups in stratified analyses for the entire study cohort. Significance between the OS of the high-risk and low-risk patients was observed in both sex a male and b female, and tumor location, c left-sided ACC, d right-sided ACC. OS overall survival, ACC adrenocortical carcinoma
Fig. 6DCA for the nomogram. Decision curve analyses depicting the clinical net benefit in the different cohorts, namely the a SEER training; b SEER internal validation; c TCGA validation; d Chinese multicenter validation set. The horizontal solid black line represents the assumption that no patients will experience the event, and the solid gray line represents the assumption that all patients will relapse. On decision curve analyses, the nomogram showed superior net benefit in all different cohorts across a range of threshold probabilities. DCA decision curve analysis, SEER Surveillance Epidemiology, and End Results database, TCGA the Cancer Genome Atlas set