Immunohistochemical markers predicting long-term recurrence following clival and spinal chordoma resection: a multicenter study

Author:

Ghaith Abdul Karim12,Akinduro Oluwaseun O.3,Alexander A. Yohan12,Goyal Anshit3,Bon-Nieves Antonio1,de Macedo Filho Leonardo3,Otamendi-Lopez Andrea3,Nathani Karim Rizwan12,Abode-Iyamah Kingsley3,Jentoft Mark E.4,Bendok Bernard R.5,Clarke Michelle J.2,Link Michael J.2,Van Gompel Jamie J.2,Quiñones-Hinojosa Alfredo3,Bydon Mohamad12

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic Neuro-Informatics Laboratory and

2. Department of Neurological Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota;

3. Department of Neurological Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida;

4. Department of Lab Medicine & Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida

5. Department of Neurological Surgery, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona; and

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Chordomas are rare tumors from notochordal remnants and account for 1%–4% of all primary bone malignancies, often arising from the clivus and sacrum. Despite margin-negative resection and postoperative radiotherapy, chordomas often recur. Further, immunohistochemical (IHC) markers have not been assessed as predictive of chordoma recurrence. The authors aimed to identify the IHC markers that are predictive of postoperative long-term (≥ 1 year) chordoma recurrence by using trained multiple tree-based machine learning (ML) algorithms. METHODS The authors reviewed the records of patients who had undergone treatment for clival and spinal chordomas between January 2017 and June 2021 across the Mayo Clinic enterprise (Minnesota, Florida, and Arizona). Demographics, type of treatment, histopathology, and other relevant clinical factors were abstracted from each patient record. Decision tree and random forest classifiers were trained and tested to predict long-term recurrence based on unseen data using an 80/20 split. RESULTS One hundred fifty-one patients diagnosed and treated for chordomas were identified: 58 chordomas of the clivus, 48 chordomas of the mobile spine, and 45 chordomas sacrococcygeal in origin. Patients diagnosed with cervical chordomas were the oldest among all groups (58 ± 14 years, p = 0.009). Most patients were male (n = 91, 60.3%) and White (n = 139, 92.1%). Most patients underwent resection with or without radiation therapy (n = 129, 85.4%). Subtotal resection followed by radiation therapy (n = 51, 33.8%) was the most common treatment modality, followed by gross-total resection then radiation therapy (n = 43, 28.5%). Multivariate analysis showed that S100 and pan-cytokeratin are more likely to predict the increase in the risk of postoperative recurrence (OR 3.67, 95% CI 1.09–12.42, p= 0.03; and OR 3.74, 95% CI 0.05–2.21, p = 0.02, respectively). In the decision tree analysis, a clinical follow-up > 1897 days was found in 37% of encounters and a 90% chance of being classified for recurrence (accuracy = 77%). Random forest analysis (n = 500 trees) showed that patient age, type of surgical treatment, location of tumor, S100, pan-cytokeratin, and EMA are the factors predicting long-term recurrence. CONCLUSIONS The IHC and clinicopathological variables combined with tree-based ML tools successfully demonstrated a high capacity to identify recurrence patterns with an accuracy of 77%. S100, pan-cytokeratin, and EMA were the IHC drivers of recurrence. This shows the power of ML algorithms in analyzing and predicting outcomes of rare conditions of a small sample size.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine,Surgery

Reference27 articles.

1. Descriptive epidemiology of chordomas in the United States;Das P,2020

2. Chordoma: current concepts, management, and future directions;Walcott BP,2012

3. The prognostic significance of different degrees of resection of skull base chordoma;Wang Y,2022

4. Surgical outcomes of clival chordoma through endoscopic endonasal approach: a single-center experience;Chen G,2022

5. Targeted therapy for chordoma: key molecular signaling pathways and the role of multimodal therapy;Akinduro OO,2021

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