Risk as a pattern over time: Delineation of time‐dependent risk factors in biological, psychological, and social variables in cancer patients

Author:

Knefel Matthias12ORCID,Zeilinger Elisabeth L.13,Lubowitzki Simone1ORCID,Krammer Katharina1,Unseld Matthias3,Bartsch Rupert4,Fuereder Thorsten4,Jäger Ulrich1,Kiesewetter Barbara45,Krauth Maria16,Raderer Markus1,Staber Philipp B.16,Valent Peter156,Gaiger Alexander156

Affiliation:

1. Division of Hematology and Hemostaseology Department of Medicine I Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

2. Department of Internal Medicine Landesklinikum Baden‐Mödling Baden Austria

3. Division of Palliative Medicine Department of Medicine I Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

4. Division of Oncology Department of Medicine I Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

5. Comprehensive Cancer Center Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

6. Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Hematology and Oncology Medical University of Vienna Vienna Austria

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSurvival in cancer patients is associated with a multitude of biological, social, and psychological factors. Although it is well established that all these factors add to overall mortality, it is not well understood how the predictive power of these parameters changes in a comprehensive model and over time.MethodsPatients who attended the authors’ outpatient clinic were invited to participate. The authors followed 5180 mixed cancer patients (51.1% female; mean age, 59.1 years [SD = 13.8]) for up to 16 years and analyzed biological (age, sex, cancer site, anemia), psychological (anxiety, depression), and social variables (marital status, education, employment status) potentially predicting overall survival in a Cox proportional hazards model.ResultsThe median survival time for the entire sample was 4.3 years (95% confidence interval, 4.0–4.7). The overall survival probabilities for 1 and 10 years were 76.8% and 38.0%, respectively. Following an empirical approach, the authors split the time interval into five periods: acute, subacute, short‐term, medium‐term, and long‐term. A complex pattern of variables predicted overall survival differently in the five periods. Biological parameters were important throughout most of the time, social parameters were either time‐independent predictors or tended to be more important in the longer term. Of the psychological parameters, only depression was a significant predictor and lost its predictive power in the long‐term.ConclusionsThe findings of this study allow the development of comprehensive patient‐specific models of risk and resilience factors addressing biopsychosocial needs of cancer patients, paving the way for a personalized treatment plan that goes beyond biomedical cancer care.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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