Multi-institutional validation of a new renal cancer-specific survival nomogram.

  • Pierre I Karakiewicz
  • Alberto Briganti
  • Felix Chun
  • Quoc-Dien Trinh
  • Paul Perrotte
  • Vincenzo Ficarra
  • Luca Cindolo
  • De La Taille Alexandre
  • Jacques Tostain
  • Peter F A Mulders
  • Laurent Salomon
  • Richard Zigeuner
  • Tommaso Prayer-Galetti
  • Denis Chautard
  • Antoine Valeri
  • Eric Lechevallier
  • Jean-Luc Descotes
  • Herve Lang
  • Arnaud Mejean
  • Jean-Jacques Patard

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

PURPOSE: We tested the hypothesis that the prediction of renal cancer-specific survival can be improved if traditional predictor variables are used within a prognostic nomogram. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Two cohorts of patients treated with either radical or partial nephrectomy for renal cortical tumors were used: one (n = 2,530) for nomogram development and for internal validation (200 bootstrap resamples), and a second (n = 1,422) for external validation. Cox proportional hazards regression analyses modeled the 2002 TNM stages, tumor size, Fuhrman grade, histologic subtype, local symptoms, age, and sex. The accuracy of the nomogram was compared with an established staging scheme. RESULTS: Cancer-specific mortality was observed in 598 (23.6%) patients, whereas 200 (7.9%) died as a result of other causes. Follow-up ranged from 0.1 to 286 months (median, 38.8 months). External validation of the nomogram at 1, 2, 5, and 10 years after nephrectomy revealed predictive accuracy of 87.8%, 89.2%, 86.7%, and 88.8%, respectively. Conversely, the alternative staging scheme predicting at 2 and 5 years was less accurate, as evidenced by 86.1% (P = .006) and 83.9% (P = .02) estimates. CONCLUSION: The new nomogram is more contemporary, provides predictions that reach further in time and, compared with its alternative, which predicts at 2 and 5 years, generates 3.1% and 2.8% more accurate predictions, respectively.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer11
ISSN0732-183X
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2007
pubmed 17416852