학술논문

New Sarculator Prognostic Nomograms for Patients with Primary Retroperitoneal Sarcoma: Case Volume Does Matter
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Annals of Surgery. Sep 27, 2023
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0003-4932
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:: To update the current Sarculator retroperitoneal sarcoma (RPS) prognostic nomograms considering the improvement in patient prognosis and the case volume effect. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA:: Survival of patients with primary RPS has been increasing over time, and the volume-outcome relationship has been well recognized. Nevertheless, the specific impact on prognostic nomograms is unknown. METHODS:: All consecutive adult patients with primary localized RPS treated at 8 European and North American sarcoma reference centers between 2010 and 2017 were included. Patients were divided in two groups: high volume centers (HVC, ≥13 cases/year) and low volume centers (LVC, <13 cases/year). Primary endpoints were overall survival (OS) and disease free-survival (DFS). Multivariable analyses for OS and DFS were performed. The nomograms were updated by recalibration. Nomograms performance was assessed in terms of discrimination (Harrell C index) and calibration (calibration plot). RESULTS:: The HVC and LVC groups comprised 857 and 244 patients, respectively. Median annual primary RPS case volume (interquartile range) was 24.0 in HVC (15.0-41.3) and 9.0 in LVC (1.8-10.3). Five-year OS was 71.4% (95% CI 68.3-74.7%) in the HVC cohort and 63.3% (56.8-70.5%) in the LVC cohort (P=0.012). Case volume was associated with both OS (LVC vs. HVC HR 1.40, 95%CI 1.08-1.82, P=0.011) and DFS (HR 1.93, 95%CI 1.57-2.37, P<0.001) at multivariable analyses. When applied to the study cohorts, the Sarculator nomograms showed good discrimination (Harrell C index between 0.68 and 0.73). The recalibrated nomograms showed good calibration in the HVC group while the original nomograms showed good calibration in the LVC group. CONCLUSIONS:: New nomograms for patients with primary RPS treated with surgery at high-volume versus low-volume sarcoma reference centers are available in the Sarculator app.