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ECOG performance status 0 or 1 and symptom classification do not improve the ability to predict renal cell carcinoma-specific survival
Authors:Karakiewicz Pierre I  Trinh Quoc-Dien  de la Taille Alexandre  Abbou Claude C  Salomon Laurent  Tostain Jacques  Cindolo Luca  Artibani Walter  Ficarra Vincenzo  Patard Jean-Jacques
Affiliation:Cancer Prognostics and Health Outcomes Unit, University of Montreal Health Center (CHUM), 1058, rue St-Denis, Montreal, Que., Canada H2X 3J4. pierre.karakiewicz@umontreal.ca
Abstract:ObjectivesWe tested and compared the improvement in prognostic ability related to the consideration of either ECOG performance status (ECOGPS) and/or symptom classification (S-CLASS) in renal cell carcinoma specific mortality (RCC-SM) predictions.MethodsUnivariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses targeted RCC-SM in 2570 RCC patients treated with either partial or radical nephrectomy. The increment in predictive accuracy related to the addition of either ECOGPS, S-CLASS or both was quantified using Harrell’s concordance index.ResultsFollow-up ranged from 0.1 to 23 years (median 3.2) and 610 patients (23.7%) died of RCC. In multivariable analyses, ECOGPS and S-CLASS represented independent predictors of RCC-SM. The addition of ECOGPS to established RCC-SM predictors increased the predictive accuracy by 0.3% (p = 0.8) versus 0.6% (p = 0.5) for S-CLASS versus 0.6% (p = 0.5) for both.ConclusionsNeither ECOGPS nor S-CLASS improves the ability to predict RCC-SM. Therefore, these variables may be safely omitted when RCC-SM risk is quantified.
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