The geriatric nutritional risk index (GNRI) is associated with mortality in several malignancies. We retrospectively analyzed whether the GNRI can predict long-term outcomes in 191 patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) after curative esophagectomies by evaluating their cancer-specific survival (CSS). In multivariate analyses, serum albumin (hazard ratio [HR], 2.498; = 0.0043), GNRI (HR, 1.941; = 0.0181), pathological tumor-node-metastasis (pTNM) stage (HR, 3.884; < 0.0001), and tumor differentiation (HR, 2.307; = 0.0066) were independent prognostic factors for CSS. In pTNM stage I, multivariate analysis identified C-reactive protein (HR, 7.172; = 0.0483) and GNRI (HR, 5.579; = 0.0291) as independent prognostic factors for CSS. In univariate analyses in pTNM stages II and III, only low GNRI ( = 0.0095) and low serum albumin levels ( = 0.0119), respectively, were significantly associated with worse CSS. In patients with low GNRI, CSS was significantly worse than in those with normal GNRI ( = 0.0011), especially in pTNM stages I ( = 0.0044) and II ( = 0.0036) groups, but not in stage III group ( = 0.5099). Preoperative GNRI may sort patients into low- or high-risk groups for shorter CSS, especially in those with pTNM stage I and II ESCC.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7381097 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.27670 | DOI Listing |
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