Gastroenterology Research and Practice (Jan 2023)

Correlation between Preoperative Platelet Count/(Lymphocyte Count × Prealbumin Count) Ratio and the Prognosis of Patients with Gastric Cancer Undergoing Radical Operation

  • Yi Liu,
  • Yanguang Yang,
  • Guomei Tai,
  • Feng Ni,
  • Cenming Yu,
  • Wenjing Zhao,
  • Ding Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2023/8401579
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2023

Abstract

Read online

Objective. To clarify the relationship between preoperative platelet count/(lymphocyte count × prealbumin count) ratio (PLPR) and the prognosis of patients with gastric cancer undergoing a radical operation, combined with Tumor Node Metastasis (TNM) staging, a scoring system was established to guide clinical application. Methods. The clinical data of 238 patients receiving radical operations for gastric cancer were retrospectively analyzed. According to the area under the Receiver operating characteristic curve, the predictive value of the preoperative PLPR for the 5-year overall survival (OS) of gastric cancer was determined, and the best cut-off value of the ratio was corresponding to the maximum value of Yoden index. Chi-squared test was applied to analyze the correlation between the ratio and clinicopathological features. Kaplan–Meier curve was applied to analyze the influence of this ratio on 5-year OS. The Cox regression model was applied to analyze the hazards affecting the long-term survival of patients. The nomogram model was used to predict the long-term survival rate. Results. The optimal cut-off point of preoperative PLPR ratio was 7.46, and the patients were segmented into two sets: one set of ratio 0.05). Age, T stage, N stage, total TNM stage, tumor size, vascular tumor thrombus, nerve invasion, preoperative neutrophil count/lymphocyte count (NLR; reference value 3.68), preoperative PLPR (reference value 7.46), preoperative platelet count/lymphocyte count (PLR; reference value 159.56), and preoperative platelet count × NLR (SII; reference value 915.48) were related to patient prognosis (P<0.05); meanwhile age, total TNM stage, preoperative PLPR (reference value 7.46), preoperative PLR (reference value 159.56), and preoperative SII (reference value 915.48) were independent hazards for prognosis (P<0.05). Five independent risk factors were analyzed by nomogram model to predict the 5-year OS of patients who underwent a radical operation for carcinoma of the stomach. Conclusion. Preoperative PLPR ratio (reference value 7.46) is an independent risk factor for long-term prognosis in patients undergoing a radical operation for gastric cancer. The nomogram scoring system established by postoperative TNM staging combined with this ratio and age, PLR, and SII can better forecast the survival of patients who underwent radical operation for carcinoma of the stomach.