Predicting disease progression from the rate of bodyweight change in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Patient during Radiotherapy

Author:

Cai Jing1,Sun Jiachen1,Lam Sai-kit1,Zhang Jiang1,Teng Xinzhi1,Lee Francis Kar-ho2,Yip Celia Wai-yi2,Chow James Chung-hang2,Lee Victor Ho-fun3,Sun Ying4

Affiliation:

1. The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

2. Queen Elizabeth Hospital

3. The University of Hong Kong

4. Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center

Abstract

Abstract

Purpose Bodyweight loss is a common occurrence in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (NPC) patients during Radiotherapy (RT). Previous studies found that the prognostic value of percentage weight loss (pWL) during RT is not credible. We aimed to develop a novel progression predictor surrogated to pWL by modelling all bodyweight records measured during the treatment interval. Method and materials This retrospective study included two independent hospitals of 624 patients. The Predicted Progression Probability (PPP) was obtained from deep learning-guided differential equation solution, model by the patient’s age, sex, body height, and the weekly measured bodyweight records. The performance of PPP in predicting disease progression was assessed, its association with prognosis and adjuvant chemotherapy response was evaluated. Results The PPP was learnt from the training cohort (N = 257) with 7 weeks of bodyweight records. The prediction performance was validated with 367 patients of the testing cohort sub-divided according to the number of bodyweight records found. The area under of curve for patients with 7 weeks (N = 155), 6 weeks(N = 176), and 5 weeks bodyweight records (N = 32) were 0.76, 0.73, and 0.95 respectively. PPP was significantly associated with progression-free and remained an independent prognostic factor adjusting for clinicopathologic variables in multivariate analysis in all study cohort (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] range: 2.50–7.04, all p < 0.001). Patients with high-PPP derived progression benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy (HR:0.41–0.54, all p < 0.03), whereas those with low-PPP did not for both cohorts. Conclusion The trajectory of bodyweight change during RT is more robust than the pWL to give a progression prediction after RT. The PPP is a reliable predictor for estimating the risk of residual diseases after RT course, which also helps to predict adjuvant chemotherapy response in locally advanced NPC patients.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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