| Literature DB >> 33860031 |
Xiaofeng Ni1,2, Ding Li2, Shengjie Dai1, Hao Pan3, Hongwei Sun1, Jianyang Ao1, Lei Chen1,3, Hongru Kong1,2.
Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common type among primary liver cancers (PLC). With its poor prognosis and survival rate, it is necessary for HCC patients to have a long-term follow-up. We believe that there are currently no relevant reports or literature about nomograms for predicting the cancer-specific mortality of HCC patients. Therefore, the primary goal of this study was to develop and evaluate nomograms to predict cancer-specific mortality and overall mortality. Data of 45,158 cases of HCC patients were collected from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program database between 2004 and 2013, which were then utilized to develop the nomograms. Finally, the performance of the nomograms was evaluated by the concordance index (C-index) and the area under the time-dependent receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (td-AUC). The categories selected to develop a nomogram for predicting cancer-specific mortality included marriage, insurance, radiotherapy, surgery, distant metastasis, lymphatic metastasis, tumor size, grade, sex, and the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stage; while the marriage, radiotherapy, surgery, AJCC stage, grade, race, sex, and age were selected to develop a nomogram for predicting overall mortality. The C-indices for predicted 1-, 3-, and 5-year cancer-specific mortality were 0.792, 0.776, and 0.774; the AUC values for 1-, 3-, and 5-year cancer-specific mortality were 0.830, 0.830, and 0.830. The C-indices for predicted 1-, 3-, and 5-year overall mortality were 0.770, 0.755, and 0.752; AUC values for predicted 1-, 3-, and 5-year overall mortality were 0.820, 0.820, and 0.830. The results showed that the nomograms possessed good agreement compared with the observed outcomes. It could provide clinicians with a personalized predicted risk of death information to evaluate the potential changes of the disease-specific condition so that clinicians can adjust therapy options when combined with the actual condition of the patient, which is beneficial to patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33860031 PMCID: PMC8024067 DOI: 10.1155/2021/1658403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Patients and survivor characteristics.
| Characteristic | At diagnosis ( | Time after diagnosis | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year ( | 3 year ( | 5 year ( | ||
| Age at diagnosis (years) | ||||
| ≤64 | 26248 (58.125) | 14999 (60.855) | 10300 (63.588) | 9205 (64.742) |
| 65-79 | 14601 (32.333) | 7818 (31.720) | 4919 (30.368) | 4203 (29.561) |
| ≥80 | 4309 (9.542) | 1830 (7.425) | 979 (6.044) | 810 (5.697) |
| Sex | ||||
| Male | 34618 (76.660) | 18614 (75.522) | 12150 (75.009) | 10628 (74.750) |
| Female | 10540 (23.340) | 6033 (24.478) | 4048 (24.991) | 3590 (25.250) |
| Race | ||||
| White | 30737 (68.065) | 16618 (67.424) | 10798 (66.663) | 9501 (66.824) |
| Black | 5927 (13.125) | 2904 (11.782) | 1808 (11.162) | 1562 (10.986) |
| Others | 8285 (18.347) | 4987 (20.234) | 3483 (21.503) | 3049 (21.445) |
| Unknown | 209 (0.463) | 138 (0.560) | 109 (0.673) | 106 (0.746) |
| Grade | ||||
| Grade 1 or 2 | 13432 (29.744) | 8816 (35.769) | 6188 (38.202) | 5427 (38.170) |
| Grade 3 or 4 | 3773 (8.355) | 1694 (6.873) | 1103 (6.809) | 960 (6.752) |
| Unknown | 27953 (61.900) | 14137 (57.358) | 8907 (54.988) | 7831 (55.078) |
| T category | ||||
| T0 | 32 (0.071) | 12 (0.049) | 6 (0.037) | 5 (0.035) |
| T1 | 17916 (39.674) | 12130 (49.215) | 8720 (53.834) | 7759 (54.572) |
| T2 | 9652 (21.374) | 6606 (26.802) | 4375 (27.010) | 3842 (27.022) |
| T3 | 9378 (20.767) | 3251 (13.190) | 1712 (10.569) | 1460 (10.269) |
| T4 | 1567 (3.470) | 436 (1.769) | 219 (1.352) | 197 (1.386) |
| Unknown | 6613 (14.644) | 2212 (8.975) | 1166 (7.198) | 955 (6.717) |
| N category | ||||
| N0 | 35400 (78.391) | 21405 (86.846) | 14561 (89.894) | 12857 (90.428) |
| N1 | 2737 (6.061) | 816 (3.311) | 403 (2.488) | 351 (2.469) |
| Unknown | 7021 (15.548) | 2426 (9.843) | 1234 (7.618) | 1010 (7.104) |
| M category | ||||
| M0 | 35157 (77.853) | 21967 (89.126) | 14879 (91.857) | 13109 (92.200) |
| M1 | 5568 (12.330) | 1136 (4.609) | 561 (3.463) | 498 (3.503) |
| Unknown | 4433 (9.817) | 1544 (6.264) | 758 (4.680) | 611 (4.297) |
| Stage | ||||
| I | 15357 (34.007) | 11166 (45.304) | 8213 (50.704) | 7317 (51.463) |
| II | 8157 (18.063) | 5976 (24.246) | 4064 (25.090) | 3578 (25.165) |
| III | 6739 (14.923) | 2770 (11.239) | 1508 (9.310) | 1287 (9.052) |
| IV | 7070 (15.656) | 1725 (6.999) | 846 (5.223) | 746 (5.247) |
| Unknown | 7835 (17.350) | 3010 (12.212) | 1567 (9.674) | 1290 (9.073) |
| Surgery | ||||
| No | 32291 (71.507) | 13989 (56.757) | 8064 (49.784) | 7049 (49.578) |
| Yes | 12464 (27.601) | 10516 (42.666) | 8064 (49.784) | 7112 (50.021) |
| Unknown | 403 (0.892) | 142 (0.576) | 70 (0.432) | 57 (0.401) |
| Radiotherapy | ||||
| No | 41894 (92.772) | 23001 (93.322) | 15185 (93.746) | 13291 (93.480) |
| Yes | 2820 (6.245) | 1466 (5.948) | 904 (5.581) | 828 (5.824) |
| Unknown | 444 (0.983) | 180 (0.730) | 109 (0.673) | 99 (0.696) |
| Insurance | ||||
| No | 1367 (3.027) | 598 (2.426) | 413 (2.550) | 372 (2.616) |
| Yes | 32083 (71.046) | 18618 (75.539) | 12835 (79.238) | 11697 (82.269) |
| Unknown | 11708 (25.927) | 5431 (22.035) | 2950 (18.212) | 2149 (15.115) |
| Marriage | ||||
| No | 19601 (43.405) | 10044 (40.751) | 6308 (38.943) | 5492 (38.627) |
| Yes | 23516 (52.075) | 13454 (54.587) | 9093 (56.137) | 7997 (56.246) |
| Unknown | 2041 (4.520) | 1149 (4.662) | 797 (4.920) | 729 (5.127) |
Figure 1Cumulative incidence estimates of mortality according to patient and survivor characteristics. (a) The cumulative incidence of the overall mortality and HCC mortality of AJCC stage. (b) The cumulative incidence of the overall mortality and HCC mortality of surgery. (c) The cumulative incidence of the overall mortality and HCC mortality of radiotherapy.
Univariable and multivariable analyses of cancer-specific survival.
| Cancer-specific survival (competing risk) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | Univariable | Multivariable | ||
| SHR (95% CI) |
| SHR (95% CI) |
| |
| Age (years) | 1.002 (1.001-1.003) | <0.001∗ | 1.000 (0.997-1.003) | 0.986 |
| Sex | ||||
| 0 (female) | 1 | 1 | ||
| 1 (male) | 1.154 (1.119-1.191) | <0.001∗ | 1.132 (1.046-1.225) | 0.002∗ |
| Race | ||||
| 1 (white) | 1 | 1 | ||
| 2 (black) | 1.183 (1.139-1.228) | <0.001∗ | 1.059 (0.964-1.164) | 0.230 |
| 3 (others) | 0.906 (0.876-0.938) | <0.001∗ | 0.959 (0.880-1.046) | 0.345 |
| Grade | ||||
| Low | 1 | 1 | ||
| High | 1854 (1.765-1.948) | <0.001∗ | 1.757 (1.631-1.892) | <0.001∗ |
| Tumor size | ||||
| <5 mm | 1 | 1 | ||
| ≥5 mm | 3.014 (2.926-3.105) | <0.001∗ | 1.577 (1.459-1.705) | <0.001∗ |
| Lymphatic metastasis | ||||
| No | 1 | 1 | ||
| Yes | 2.001 (1.935-2.068) | <0.001∗ | 1.220 (1.087-1.368) | <0.001∗ |
| Distant metastasis | ||||
| No | 1 | 1 | ||
| Yes | 3.559 (3.436-3.686) | <0.001∗ | 1.550 (1.398-1.718) | <0.001∗ |
| Stage | ||||
| Early | 1 | 1 | ||
| Advanced | 3.651 (3.543-3.762) | <0.001∗ | 1.760 (1.614-1.918) | <0.001∗ |
| Surgery (yes:1, no: 0) | ||||
| No | 1 | 1 | ||
| Yes | 0.263 (0.254-0.273) | <0.001∗ | 0.295 (0.274-0.319) | <0.001∗ |
| Radiotherapy | ||||
| No | 1 | 1 | ||
| Yes | 1.286 (1.222-1.354) | <0.001∗ | 0.808 (0.716-0.912) | <0.001∗ |
| Insurance | ||||
| No | 1 | 1 | ||
| Yes | 0.537 (0.501-0.576) | <0.001∗ | 0.670 (0.567-0.791) | <0.001∗ |
| Marriage | ||||
| No | 1 | 1 | ||
| Yes | 0.825 (0.804-0.847) | <0.001∗ | 0.866 (0.809-0.927) | <0.001∗ |
HR: hazard ratio; CI: confidence interval. ∗P < 0.05.
Univariable and multivariable analyses of overall survival.
| Overall survival (Cox proportional hazards) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | Univariable | Multivariable | ||
| HR/Wald (95% CI) |
| HR (95% CI) |
| |
| Age (years) | 1.007 (1.007-1.007) | <0.001∗ | 1.009 (1.008-1.010) | <0.001∗ |
| Sex | ||||
| 0 (female) | ||||
| 1 (male) | 49.321 (0.886-0.934) | <0.001∗ | 1.031 (1.014-1.049) | <0.001∗ |
| Race | 314.874 | <0.001∗ | ||
| 1 (white) | 2.475 (0.705-1.039) | 0.116 | ||
| 2 (black) | 172.787 (1.185-1.258) | <0.001∗ | 1.043 (1.021-1.065) | <0.001∗ |
| 3 (others) | 289.503 (1.357-1.469) | <0.001∗ | 0.895 (0.877-0.914) | <0.001∗ |
| Grade | 1225.702 | <0.001∗ | ||
| Low | 1141.247 (0.627-0.660) | <0.001∗ | ||
| High | 6.827 (1.013-1.096) | 0.009 | 1.036 (1.018-1.055) | <0.001∗ |
| Tumor size | 5717.775 | <0.001∗ | ||
| <5 mm | 4819.242 (0.339-0.360) | <0.001∗ | ||
| ≥5 mm | 369.677 (0.735-0.778) | <0.001∗ | 1.006 (0.989-1.023) | 0.505 |
| Lymphatic metastasis | 3035.483 | <0.001∗ | ||
| No | 2055.399 (0.504-0.533) | <0.001∗ | ||
| Yes | 43.073 (1.118-1.228) | <0.001∗ | 0.989 (0.958-1.022) | 0.510 |
| Distant metastasis | 5667.517 | <0.001∗ | ||
| No | 1622.374 (0.478-0.512) | <0.001∗ | ||
| Yes | 359.701 (1.440-1.566) | <0.001∗ | 1.006 (0.987-1.042) | 0.316 |
| Stage | ||||
| Early (1, 2) | 3528.578 (0.394-0.418) | <0.001∗ | ||
| Advanced (3, 4) | 134.646 (1.160-1.232) | <0.001∗ | 1.064 (1.043-1.085) | <0.001∗ |
| Surgery (yes:1, no: 0) | 6792.709 | <0.001∗ | ||
| No | 667.712 (3.726-4.623) | <0.001∗ | ||
| Yes | 6733.661 (3.301-3.500) | <0.001∗ | 0.808 (0.795-0.821) | <0.001∗ |
| Radiotherapy | 117.182 | <0.001∗ | ||
| No | 60.740 (0.590-0.730) | <0.001∗ | ||
| Yes | 17.389 (0.700-0.879) | <0.001∗ | 0.932 (0.906-0.959) | <0.001∗ |
| Insurance | 364.771 | <0.001∗ | ||
| No | 46.105 (1.174-1.338) | <0.001∗ | ||
| Yes | 240.728 (0.806-0.846) | <0.001∗ | 0.961 (0.918-1.005) | 0.081 |
| Marriage | 313.330 | <0.001∗ | ||
| No | 18.338 (1.069-1.195) | <0.001∗ | 1 | |
| Yes | 8.244 (0.872-0.974) | 0.004∗ | 0.949 (0.935-0.963) | <0.001∗ |
HR: hazard ratio; CI: confidence interval. ∗P < 0.05.
Figure 2Nomogram to predict cancer-specific mortality of HCC patients. The item “Stage” in the figure represented the clinical stage; stages 1 and 2 were early, while stages 3 and 4 were advance, respectively. Tumor size is bounded by 5 mm. The item “Grade” represented the pathological grade; grades 1 and 2 were low, while grades 3 and 4 were high, respectively.
Figure 3Nomogram to predict overall mortality of HCC patients. The item “Stage” in the figure represented the clinical stage; stages 1 and 2 were early, while stages 3 and 4 were advance, respectively. Tumor size is bounded by 5 mm. The item “Grade” represented the pathological grade; grades 1 and 2 were low, while grades 3 and 4 were high, respectively.
Figure 4The calibration curve between predicted mortality and observed outcome. (a) The relationship between predicted 1-year mortality and observed mortality. (b) The relationship between predicted 3-year mortality and observed mortality. (c) The relationship between predicted 5-year mortality and observed mortality.
Figure 5The area under the time-dependent receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (td-AUC).