# A new scoring system for predicting survival in patients with non-small cell lung cancer

**Authors:** Steven E Schild, Angelina D Tan, Jason A Wampfler, Helen J Ross, Ping Yang, Jeff A Sloan

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/cam4.479 · Cancer Medicine · 2015-06-23

## TL;DR

A new scoring system was developed to predict survival rates in non-small cell lung cancer patients based on various clinical and lifestyle factors.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is a validated scoring system for predicting NSCLC patient survival using combined clinical and lifestyle prognostic factors.

## Key findings

- The scoring system uses factors like age, tumor size, and smoking cessation to predict 5-year survival rates.
- Bootstrap validation confirmed the system's reliability with survival estimates ranging from 8.3% to 84.7% based on total scores.
- The score can guide patient counseling and clinical trial design for NSCLC.

## Abstract

This analysis was performed to create a scoring system to estimate the survival of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Data from 1274 NSCLC patients were analyzed to create and validate a scoring system. Univariate (UV) and multivariate (MV) Cox models were used to evaluate the prognostic importance of each baseline factor. Prognostic factors that were significant on both UV and MV analyses were used to develop the score. These included quality of life, age, performance status, primary tumor diameter, nodal status, distant metastases, and smoking cessation. The score for each factor was determined by dividing the 5-year survival rate (%) by 10 and summing these scores to form a total score. MV models and the score were validated using bootstrapping with 1000 iterations from the original samples. The score for each prognostic factor ranged from 1 to 7 points with higher scores reflective of better survival. Total scores (sum of the scores from each independent prognostic factor) of 32–37 correlated with a 5-year survival of 8.3% (95% CI = 0–17.1%), 38–43 correlated with a 5-year survival of 20% (95% CI = 13–27%), 44–47 correlated with a 5-year survival of 48.3% (95% CI = 41.5–55.2%), 48–49 correlated to a 5-year survival of 72.1% (95% CI = 65.6–78.6%), and 50–52 correlated to a 5-year survival of 84.7% (95% CI = 79.6–89.8%). The bootstrap method confirmed the reliability of the score. Prognostic factors significantly associated with survival on both UV and MV analyses were used to construct a valid scoring system that can be used to predict survival of NSCLC patients. Optimally, this score could be used when counseling patients, and designing future trials.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** non-small cell lung cancer (MONDO:0005233)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** EPO (erythropoietin) [NCBI Gene 2056] {aka DBAL, ECYT5, EP, MVCD2}
- **Diseases:** nodal (MESH:D013611), Distant Metastasis (MESH:D009362), pleural effusion (MESH:D010996), smoking (MESH:D015208), hoarseness (MESH:D006685), lung disease (MESH:D008171), pericardial effusion (MESH:D010490), IV disease (MESH:D020432), Weight loss (MESH:D015431), metastatic disease (MESH:D000092182), deaths (MESH:D003643), NSCLC (MESH:D002289), anemia (MESH:D000740), Tumor (MESH:D009369), Deficit (MESH:D009461), Lung Cancer (MESH:D008175), pleural nodules (MESH:D010995)
- **Chemicals:** calcium (MESH:D002118), MV (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

19 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC4567018/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC4567018