Cancers (Aug 2021)

A Retrospective Cohort Study of Myosteatosis and Quality of Life in Head and Neck Cancer Patients

  • Amy L. Shaver,
  • Katia Noyes,
  • Heather M. Ochs-Balcom,
  • Gregory Wilding,
  • Andrew D. Ray,
  • Sung Jun Ma,
  • Mark Farrugia,
  • Anurag K. Singh,
  • Mary E. Platek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13174283
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 17
p. 4283

Abstract

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Head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment-related morbidity can be detrimental to quality of life (QOL). Myosteatosis is associated with poor QOL in multiple cancers. If predictive of poor QOL trajectories, myosteatosis would be a tool for clinicians to determine which patients may require additional support during treatment. The purpose of this study was to determine if pretreatment myosteatosis is associated with a poor QOL trajectory following treatment completion. Methods: In a retrospective cohort design, myosteatosis was determined from pretreatment CT scans. Both physical and global QOL score was assessed through patient interview on follow-up appointment. Demographic, cancer-specific, and social covariates were collected, reported, and considered as potential confounders. Results: The population of 163 patients was mostly male (82.2%) and white (91.4%) with oropharyngeal cancer (55.8%). Males with myosteatosis had a physical QOL score 46.84 points lower at one-year following treatment completion (p = 0.01) than those with normal muscle density (p = 0.01). Males with myosteatosis averaged 57.57 points lower at one-year post-treatment (p = 0.01) in global QOL scores. Conclusions: Over one year following completion of treatment, patients with myosteatosis reported worse physical and global QOL scores than patients with normal muscle density.

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