AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to develop a predictive model for the risk of severe liver damage caused by chemotherapy in cancer patients, using data from 3,870 patients divided into training and validation sets.
  • The model identified specific risk factors (serum triglyceride, body mass index, and history of hypertension) and was able to categorize patients into low, intermediate, and high-risk groups for liver damage, with accuracy indicated by a C-index above 0.8.
  • Preventive treatment with hepatoprotective drugs significantly reduced the incidence of severe liver damage, especially in intermediate and high-risk patients, highlighting the model's potential clinical application for better patient management prior to chemotherapy.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To explore a quantitative predictive model for the risk of chemotherapy-induced severe liver damage (CISLD).

Materials And Methods: In total, 3870 consecutive cancer patients initially treated with chemotherapy were retrospectively collected and randomly assigned to a training (n=2580) or internal validation (n=1290) set in a 2:1 ratio to construct and validate the model. Additional external validation was performed using another data set (n=413). A total of 486 patients were prospectively enrolled to assess the clinical significance of the model. CISLD was defined as grade ≥3 hepatotoxicity.

Results: CISLD was found in 255 (9.9%), 128 (9.9%) and 36 (8.7%) patients in the training, internal and external validation sets, respectively. Serum triglyceride, body mass index and history of hypertension formed the basis of the score model. Patients could be stratified into low, intermediate and high-risk groups with <10%, 10-30% and >30% CISLD occurrence, respectively. This model displayed a concordance index (C-index) of 0.834 and was validated in both the internal (C-index, 0.830) and external (C-index, 0.817) sets. The incidence of CISLD was significantly reduced in those who received preventive hepatoprotective drugs compared to those who did not among patients assessed as the intermediate risk group (8.9% vs 17.5%, =0.042) and the high risk group (15.6% vs 55.8%, =0.043).

Conclusions: The new score model can be used to accurately predict the risk of CISLD in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy. Clinically, this can be translated into a reference tool for oncologists in the clinical decision-making process before chemotherapy to provide appropriate prevention and interventions for patients with a high risk of CISLD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6630723PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S199967DOI Listing

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