External validation of the first prognostic nomogram for older adults with cancer

Author:

Tay Yu Ling1,Ong Whee Sze2ORCID,Liew Sherilyn Zi Hui3ORCID,Chowdhury Anupama Roy1,Chan Johan3,Ramalingam Mothi Babu4,Rajasekaran Tanujaa3,Tan Tira J.3ORCID,Krishna Lalit5,Lai Olive6,Chow Agnes Lai Yin7,Chen Simon8,Kanesvaran Ravindran910

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geriatric Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore

2. Division of Clinical Trials and Epidemiological Sciences, National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore

3. Division of Medical Oncology, National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore

4. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore

5. Division of Supportive and Palliative Care, National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore

6. Department of Pharmacy, National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore

7. Division of Medical Oncology – Research, National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore

8. Department of Nursing, National Cancer Centre Singapore, Singapore

9. Division of Medical Oncology, National Cancer Centre Singapore, 11 Hospital Drive, Singapore 169610

10. Oncology ACP, Singhealth Duke-NUS, Singapore

Abstract

Background: The geriatric oncology population tends to be complex because of multimorbidity, functional and cognitive decline, malnutrition and social frailty. Prognostic indices for predicting survival of elderly cancer patients to guide treatment remain scarce. A nomogram based on all domains of the geriatric assessment was previously developed at the National Cancer Centre Singapore (NCCS) to predict overall survival (OS) in elderly cancer patients. This nomogram comprised of six variables (age, eastern cooperative oncology group performance status, disease stage, geriatric depression scale (GDS), DETERMINE nutritional index and serum albumin). Objectives: To externally validate the NCCS prognostic nomogram. Design: This is a prospective cohort study. Methods: The nomogram was developed based on a training cohort of 249 patients aged ⩾70 years who attended the NCCS outpatient geriatric oncology clinic between May 2007 and November 2010. External validation of the nomogram using the Royston and Altman approach was carried out on an independent testing cohort of 252 patients from the same clinic between July 2015 and June 2017. Model misspecification, discrimination and calibration were assessed. Results: Median OS of the testing cohort was 3.1 years, which was significantly higher than the corresponding 1.0 year for the training cohort (log-rank p < 0.001). The nomogram achieved a high level of discrimination in the testing cohort (0.7112), comparable to the training cohort (0.7108). Predicted death probabilities were generally well calibrated with the observed death probabilities, as the joint test of calibration-in-the-large estimates at year 1, 2 and 3 from zeros and calibration slope from one was insignificant with p = 0.432. There were model misspecifications in GDS and serum albumin. Conclusion: This study externally validated the prognostic nomogram in an independent cohort of geriatric oncology patients. This supports the use of this nomogram in clinical practice.

Funder

National Cancer Centre Singapore Research Fund

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Oncology

Reference23 articles.

1. World Health Organization. Ageing and health, https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/ageing-and-health (2022, accessed 29 January 2023).

2. Population in Brief. Strategy group, Prime Minister’s Office, https://www.strategygroup.gov.sg/files/media-centre/publications/Population-in-Brief-2022.pdf (2022).

3. Singapore Cancer Registry Annual Report 2020. National registry of diseases office, https://nrdo.gov.sg/docs/librariesprovider3/default-document-library/scr-2020-annual-report_web-release.pdf (2022).

4. Cognitive dysfunctions in elderly cancer patients: A new challenge for oncologists

5. Enrollment of Elderly Patients in Clinical Trials for Cancer Drug Registration: A 7-Year Experience by the US Food and Drug Administration

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