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Prognostic Factor Analysis of Overall Survival in Gastric Cancer from Two Phase III Studies of Second-line Ramucirumab (REGARD and RAINBOW) Using Pooled Patient Data

Authors
Fuchs, Charles S.Muro, KeiTomasek, JiriVan Cutsem, EricCho, Jae YongOh, Sang-CheulSafran, HowardBodoky, GyorgyChau, IanShimada, YasuhiroAl-Batran, Salah-EddinPassalacqua, RodolfoOhtsu, AtsushiEmig, MichaelFerry, DavidChandrawansa, KumariHsu, YanzhiSashegyi, AndreasLiepa, Astra M.Wilke, Hansjochen
Issue Date
Jun-2017
Publisher
KOREAN GASTRIC CANCER ASSOC
Keywords
Prognosis; Stomach neoplasms; Gastroesophageal junction; Survival
Citation
JOURNAL OF GASTRIC CANCER, v.17, no.2, pp.132 - 144
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF GASTRIC CANCER
Volume
17
Number
2
Start Page
132
End Page
144
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/83354
DOI
10.5230/jgc.2017.17.e16
ISSN
2093-582X
Abstract
Purpose: To identify baseline prognostic factors for survival in patients with disease progression, during or after chemotherapy for the treatment of advanced gastric or gastroesophageal junction (GEJ) cancer. Materials and Methods: We pooled data from patients randomized between 2009 and 2012 in 2 phase III, global double-blind studies of ramucirumab for the treatment of advanced gastric or GEJ adenocarcinoma following disease progression on first-line platinum-and/or fluoropyrimidine-containing therapy (REGARD and RAINBOW). Forty-one key baseline clinical and laboratory factors common in both studies were examined. Model building started with covariate screening using univariate Cox models (significance level=0.05). A stepwise multivariable Cox model identified the final prognostic factors (entry+exit significance level=0.01). Cox models were stratified by treatment and geographic region. The process was repeated to identify baseline prognostic quality of life (QoL) parameters. Results: Of 1,020 randomized patients, 953 (93%) patients without any missing covariates were included in the analysis. We identified 12 independent prognostic factors of poor survival: 1) peritoneal metastases; 2) Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance score 1; 3) the presence of a primary tumor; 4) time to progression since prior therapy <6 months; 5) poor/unknown tumor differentiation; abnormally low blood levels of 6) albumin, 7) sodium, and/or 8) lymphocytes; and abnormally high blood levels of 9) neutrophils, 10) aspartate aminotransferase (AST), 11) alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and/or 12) lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Factors were used to devise a 4-tier prognostic index (median overall survival [OS] by risk [months]: high=3.4, moderate=6.4, medium=9.9, and low=14.5; Harrell's C-index=0.66; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.64-0.68). Addition of QoL to the model identified patient-reported appetite loss as an independent prognostic factor. Conclusions: The identified prognostic factors and the reported prognostic index may help clinical decision-making, patient stratification, and planning of future clinical studies.
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