AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to identify clinical features and prognostic factors affecting survival in young adults (≤40 years) diagnosed with advanced gastric cancer, involving 220 patients.
  • Results showed a median overall survival of 16.3 months, with significant factors including high neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and hypoproteinemia as poor prognostic indicators, while previous radical gastrectomy was linked to better survival.
  • A three-tier prognostic index was created to categorize patients into good, intermediate, or poor-risk groups, potentially assisting in clinical decision-making and future research on this patient population.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To characterize clinical features and identify baseline prognostic factors for survival in young adults with advanced gastric cancer (YAAGC).

Materials And Methods: A total of 220 young inpatients (age less than or equal to 40 years) with an initial diagnosis of advanced gastric cancer were retrospectively enrolled in this study.

Results: Of a consecutive cohort of 220 patients with YAAGC, the median overall survival (OS) time was 16.3 months. One-year survival rate was 43.6% (95% CI: 36.5 to 50.7). In this cohort, a female (71.4%, = 157) predominance and a number of patients with poorly differentiated tumors (95.9%, = 211) were observed. In the univariate analysis, OS was significantly associated with neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) (≥3.12), hypoproteinemia (<40 g/L), presence of peritoneal or bone metastases, and previous gastrectomy of primary tumor or radical gastrectomy. In multivariate Cox regression analysis, hypoproteinemia [hazard ratio (HR) 1.522, 95% CI 1.085 to 2.137, = 0.015] and high NLR level (HR 1.446, 95% CI 1.022 to 2.047, = 0.021) were two independent poor prognostic factors, while previous radical gastrectomy was associated with a favorable OS (HR 0.345, 95% CI 0.205 to 0.583, = 0.000). A three-tier prognostic index was constructed dividing patients into good-, intermediate-, or poor-risk groups. Median OS for good-, intermediate-, and poor-risk groups was 36.43, 17.87, and 11.27 months, respectively.

Conclusions: Three prognostic factors were identified, and a three-tier prognostic index was devised. The reported prognostic index may aid clinical decision-making, patient risk stratification, and planning of future clinical studies on YAAGC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8462089PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.667655DOI Listing

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