AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to see if certain preoperative lab results could predict death from clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) after surgery.
  • Researchers looked at 1,707 patients who had unilateral, clinically confined RCC treated with radical nephrectomy from 1970-2002, analyzing factors like hypercalcemia, anemia, elevated ESR, and alkaline phosphatase.
  • Results showed that high calcium, anemia, and elevated ESR significantly increased the risk of dying from RCC, highlighting the importance of including these lab values in future treatment assessments and studies.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To determine whether preoperative laboratory values are independently associated with death from clinically confined clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) after radical nephrectomy.

Methods: We identified 1707 patients with clinically confined (pNx/pN0, pM0), unilateral, sporadic clear cell RCC treated with radical nephrectomy between 1970 and 2002. Associations of abnormal preoperative laboratory values including hypercalcemia, anemia, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and elevated alkaline phosphatase with death from RCC were evaluated using Cox proportional hazards regression models, both univariately and multivariately by adjusting for known prognostic features of the 2002 primary tumor classification, tumor size, nuclear grade, and coagulative tumor necrosis.

Results: At last follow-up, 1009 patients had died, including 425 who died from RCC at a median of 3.0 years after surgery (range, 0 to 26 years). Even after adjusting for known prognostic features, 9% of patients with preoperative hypercalcemia exhibited significantly increased likelihood of dying from RCC compared with patients with normal or lower levels of serum calcium (relative ration [RR] 1.64; P = 0.002). Similarly, preoperative anemia (35% of patients; RR 1.27; P = 0.026) and elevated ESR (44% of patients; RR 1.66; P = 0.003) portended an increased risk of death from RCC even after multivariate adjustment.

Conclusions: Abnormal preoperative laboratory values including hypercalcemia, anemia, and elevated ESR are independently associated with increased risk of cancer-specific death from clinically confined clear cell RCC. Consideration of these variables in future models may improve prognostic accuracy. We believe these factors should be routinely assessed and included in prospective studies of outcome in RCC patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2789389PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2007.08.048DOI Listing

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