scholarly journals Overall Survival Prediction in Renal Cell Carcinoma Patients Using Computed Tomography Radiomic and Clinical Information

Author(s):  
Zahra Khodabakhshi ◽  
Mehdi Amini ◽  
Shayan Mostafaei ◽  
Atlas Haddadi Avval ◽  
Mostafa Nazari ◽  
...  

AbstractThe aim of this work is to investigate the applicability of radiomic features alone and in combination with clinical information for the prediction of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) patients’ overall survival after partial or radical nephrectomy. Clinical studies of 210 RCC patients from The Cancer Imaging Archive (TCIA) who underwent either partial or radical nephrectomy were included in this study. Regions of interest (ROIs) were manually defined on CT images. A total of 225 radiomic features were extracted and analyzed along with the 59 clinical features. An elastic net penalized Cox regression was used for feature selection. Accelerated failure time (AFT) with the shared frailty model was used to determine the effects of the selected features on the overall survival time. Eleven radiomic and twelve clinical features were selected based on their non-zero coefficients. Tumor grade, tumor malignancy, and pathology t-stage were the most significant predictors of overall survival (OS) among the clinical features (p < 0.002, < 0.02, and < 0.018, respectively). The most significant predictors of OS among the selected radiomic features were flatness, area density, and median (p < 0.02, < 0.02, and < 0.05, respectively). Along with important clinical features, such as tumor heterogeneity and tumor grade, imaging biomarkers such as tumor flatness, area density, and median are significantly correlated with OS of RCC patients.

2020 ◽  
pp. 153537022097710
Author(s):  
Chunyang Chen ◽  
Xinyu Geng ◽  
Rui Liang ◽  
Dongze Zhang ◽  
Meiyun Sun ◽  
...  

This study built and tested two effective nomograms for the purpose of predicting cancer-specific survival and overall survival of chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (chRCC) patients. Multivariate Cox regression analysis was employed to filter independent prognostic factors predictive of cancer-specific survival and overall survival, and the nomograms were built based on a training set incorporating 2901 chRCC patients in a retrospective study (from 2004 to 2015) downloaded from the surveillance, epidemiology, and end results (SEER) database. The nomograms were verified on a validation cohort of 1934 patients, subsequently the performances of the nomograms were examined according to the receiver operating characteristic curve, calibration curves, the concordance (C-index), and decision curve analysis. The results showed that tumor grade, AJCC and N stages, race, marital status, age, histories of chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery were the individual prognostic factors for overall survival, and that AJCC, N and SEER stages, histories of surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, age, tumor grade were individual prognostic factors for cancer-specific survival. According to C-indexes, receiver operating characteristic curves, and decision curve analysis outcomes, the nomograms showed a higher accuracy in predicting overall survival and OSS when compared with TNM stage and SEER stage. All the calibration curves were significantly consistent between predictive and validation sets. In this study, the nomograms, which were validated to be highly accurate and applicable, were built to facilitate individualized predictions of the cancer-specific survival and overall survival to patients diagnosed with chRCC between 2004 and 2015.


2011 ◽  
Vol 64 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 173-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Levakov ◽  
Sasa Vojinov ◽  
Dimitrije Jeremic ◽  
Jasenko Djozic ◽  
Olivera Vignjevic

The aim of this study was to show whether immunotherapy should be administered in patients with renal cell carcinoma after radical nephrectomy in N0 and N1 stage of disease. The research was conducted in 60 patients with renal adenocarcinoma after radical nephrectomy. The study group included two subgroups of patients: the treatment group consisted of 30 patients receiving immunotherapy, of whom 15 had N1 disease stage and 15 had N0 disease stage; and the observation group consisted of 30 patients who did not receive immunotherapy, of whom 15 had N1 disease stage and 15 had N0 disease stage. It was shown that the administration of immunotherapy in N0 stage neither improved the overall survival nor postponed the appearance of metastases and that immunotherapy in N1 stage even worsened the prognosis in overall survival as compared with the observation group. There is no benefit of administering immunotherapy in patients with N0 and N1 stage of disease after radical nephrectomy.


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