A preoperative risk scoring system for survival prediction in clinical stage IB lung adenocarcinoma: a multicenter study
Kotaro Murakami, Tetsuya Isaka, Takuya Nagashima, Hiroyuki Adachi, Shunsuke Shigefuku, Noritake Kikunishi, Naoko Shigeta, Yujin Kudo, Yoshihiro Miyata, Morihito Okada, Norihiko Ikeda, Hiroyuki Ito

TL;DR
This study creates a preoperative scoring system to predict survival in early-stage lung adenocarcinoma patients, using factors like smoking history, blood markers, and PET scans.
Contribution
A novel preoperative risk scoring system for clinical stage IB lung adenocarcinoma patients based on three independent prognostic factors.
Findings
Smoking history, elevated CEA levels, and high SUVmax on PET were identified as independent poor prognostic factors.
A four-tier risk stratification system was developed with distinct five-year survival rates ranging from 52.1% to 100%.
The model showed good discrimination ability with an area under the curve of 0.738 and a concordance index of 0.753.
Abstract
Clinical stage (c-stage) IB lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) presents variable survival outcomes, and the prognostic significance of factors such as ground-glass opacity components and positron emission tomography (PET) metrics remains unclear. Despite recent advances, no preoperative scoring model has been established to stratify risk in this subgroup. We aimed to identify preoperative prognostic factors in c-stage IB LUAD and develop a simple scoring system for predicting overall survival (OS). We retrospectively analyzed data from 245 patients with c-stage IB LUAD who underwent lobectomy at three institutions between 2010 and 2020. Cox regression analysis was performed to identify independent preoperative prognostic factors for OS. A risk score was developed by assigning points to each factor, based on the regression coefficients. Thereafter, patients were stratified into four risk groups…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment · Hepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment and Prognosis · Cholangiocarcinoma and Gallbladder Cancer Studies
