Prediction of long-term survival after gastrectomy using random survival forests

Author:

Rahman S A12ORCID,Maynard N3,Trudgill N4,Crosby T5,Park M2,Wahedally H2,Underwood T J1,Cromwell D A2,

Affiliation:

1. School of Cancer Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

2. Clinical Effectiveness Unit, Royal College of Surgeons of England, London, UK

3. Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust, Oxford, UK

4. Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS Trust, Birmingham, UK

5. Velindre Cancer Centre, Cardiff, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background No well validated and contemporaneous tools for personalized prognostication of gastric adenocarcinoma exist. This study aimed to derive and validate a prognostic model for overall survival after surgery for gastric adenocarcinoma using a large national dataset. Methods National audit data from England and Wales were used to identify patients who underwent a potentially curative gastrectomy for adenocarcinoma of the stomach. A total of 2931 patients were included and 29 clinical and pathological variables were considered for their impact on survival. A non-linear random survival forest methodology was then trained and validated internally using bootstrapping with calibration and discrimination (time-dependent area under the receiver operator curve (tAUC)) assessed. Results The median survival of the cohort was 69 months, with a 5-year survival of 53.2 per cent. Ten variables were found to influence survival significantly and were included in the final model, with the most important being lymph node positivity, pT stage and achieving an R0 resection. Patient characteristics including ASA grade and age were also influential. On validation the model achieved excellent performance with a 5-year tAUC of 0.80 (95 per cent c.i. 0.78 to 0.82) and good agreement between observed and predicted survival probabilities. A wide spread of predictions for 3-year (14.8–98.3 (i.q.r. 43.2–84.4) per cent) and 5-year (9.4–96.1 (i.q.r. 31.7–73.8) per cent) survival were seen. Conclusions A prognostic model for survival after a potentially curative resection for gastric adenocarcinoma was derived and exhibited excellent discrimination and calibration of predictions.

Funder

Association of Upper Gastrointestinal Surgery

Heartburn Cancer UK and The Royal College of Surgeons of England Surgical Specialty Lead Programme

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

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