Cancers (May 2020)

The Relationship between ECOG-PS, mGPS, BMI/WL Grade and Body Composition and Physical Function in Patients with Advanced Cancer

  • Ross D. Dolan,
  • Louise E. Daly,
  • Claribel Pl. Simmons,
  • Aoife M. Ryan,
  • Wei Mj. Sim,
  • Marie Fallon,
  • Derek G. Power,
  • Andrew Wilcock,
  • Matthew Maddocks,
  • Michael I. Bennett,
  • Caroline Usborne,
  • Barry J. Laird,
  • Donald C. McMillan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12051187
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 1187

Abstract

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Cancer remains one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide and the associated reduction in physical function has a marked impact on both quality of life and survival. The aim of the present study was to examine the relationship between Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group-Performance status (ECOG-PS), modified Glasgow Prognostic Score (mGPS), Body Mass Index/Weight Loss grade (BMI/WL grade), and Computerised Tomography (CT)-derived body composition measurement and physical function in patients with advanced cancer. Nine sites contributed prospective data on patient demographics, ECOG-PS, mGPS, physical function tests, and CT-derived body composition. Categorical variables were analysed using χ2 test for linear-by-linear association, or χ2 test for 2-by-2 tables. Associations were analysed using binary logistic regression. A total of 523 cancer patients (266 males, 257 females) were included in the final analysis and most had metastatic disease (83.2%). The median overall survival was 5.6 months. On multivariate binary logistic regression analysis, a high ECOG-PS remained independently associated with a low skeletal muscle index (p p p p p p p p < 0.05). In conclusion, a high ECOG-PS and a high mGPS as outlined in the ECOG-PS/mGPS framework were consistently associated with poorer body composition and physical function in patients with advanced cancer.

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