Cancer Medicine (Feb 2024)

Psoas muscle area is an independent survival prognosticator in patients undergoing surgery for long‐bone metastases

  • Chia‐Che Lee,
  • Ting‐En Tseng,
  • Ruey‐Feng Chang,
  • Hung‐Kuan Yen,
  • Yu‐An Chen,
  • Yu‐Yung Chen,
  • Chih‐Horng Wu,
  • Ming‐Hsiao Hu,
  • Mao‐Hsu Yen,
  • Michiel Bongers,
  • Olivier Q. Groot,
  • Cheng‐Yo Lai,
  • Wei‐Hsin Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.7072
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Background Predictive analytics is gaining popularity as an aid to treatment planning for patients with bone metastases, whose expected survival should be considered. Decreased psoas muscle area (PMA), a morphometric indicator of suboptimal nutritional status, has been associated with mortality in various cancers, but never been integrated into current survival prediction algorithms (SPA) for patients with skeletal metastases. This study investigates whether decreased PMA predicts worse survival in patients with extremity metastases and whether incorporating PMA into three modern SPAs (PATHFx, SORG‐NG, and SORG‐MLA) improves their performance. Methods One hundred eighty‐five patients surgically treated for long‐bone metastases between 2014 and 2019 were divided into three PMA tertiles (small, medium, and large) based on their psoas size on CT. Kaplan–Meier, multivariable regression, and Cox proportional hazards analyses were employed to compare survival between tertiles and examine factors associated with mortality. Logistic regression analysis was used to assess whether incorporating adjusted PMA values enhanced the three SPAs' discriminatory abilities. The clinical utility of incorporating PMA into these SPAs was evaluated by decision curve analysis (DCA). Results Patients with small PMA had worse 90‐day and 1‐year survival after surgery (log‐rank test p 0.5 after the addition of adjusted PMA to these SPAs. Conclusions Decreased PMA on CT is associated with worse survival in surgically treated patients with extremity metastases, even after controlling for three contemporary SPAs. Physicians should consider the additional prognostic value of PMA on survival in patients undergoing consideration for operative management due to extremity metastases.

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