Sarcopenia Predicts Overall Survival in Patients with Lung, Breast, Prostate, or Myeloma Spine Metastases Undergoing Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT), Independent of Histology

Author:

Zakaria Hesham Mostafa1,Llaniguez Jeremy T1,Telemi Edvin1,Chuang Matthew1,Abouelleil Mohamed1,Wilkinson Brandon1,Chandra Ankush1,Boyce-Fappiano David2,Elibe Erinma2,Schultz Lonni3,Siddiqui Farzan2,Griffith Brent4,Kalkanis Steven N1,Lee Ian Yu1,Chang Victor1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, Neuroscience Institute, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan

2. Department of Public Health Sciences, Neuroscience Institute, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan

3. Department of Radiology, Neuroscience Institute, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan

4. Department of Radiation Oncology, Neuroscience Institute, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Predicting survival of patients with spinal metastases would help stratify treatments from aggressive to palliation. OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether sarcopenia predicts survival in patients with lung, breast, prostate, or multiple myeloma spinal metastases. METHODS Psoas muscle measurements in patients with spinal metastasis were taken from computed tomography scans at 2 time points: at first episode of stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) and from the most recent scan available. Overall survival and hazard ratios were calculated with multivariate cox proportional hazards regression analyses. RESULTS In 417 patients with spinal metastases, 40% had lung cancer, 27% breast, 21% prostate, and 11% myeloma. Overall survival was not associated with age, sex, ethnicity, levels treated, or SBRT volume. Multivariate analysis showed patients in the lowest psoas tertile had shorter survival (222 d, 95% CI = 185-323 d) as compared to the largest tertile (579 d, 95% CI = 405-815 d), (HR1.54, P = .005). Median psoas size as a cutoff value was also strongly predictive for survival (HR1.48, P = .002). Survival was independent of tumor histology. The psoas/vertebral body ratio was also successful in predicting overall survival independent of tumor histology and gender (HR1.52, P < .01). Kaplan–Meier survival curves visually represent survival (P = .0005). CONCLUSION In patients with spine metastases, psoas muscle size as a hallmark of frailty/sarcopenia is an objective, simple, and effective way to identify patients who are at risk for shorter survival, regardless of tumor histology. This information can be used to help with surgical decision making in patients with advanced cancer, as patients with small psoas sizes are at higher risk of death.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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