Ninety-day mortality rates after esophagectomy are an indicator of the quality of surgical oncologic management. Accurate risk prediction based on large data sets may aid patients and surgeons in making informed decisions.
To develop and validate a risk prediction model of death within 90 days after esophagectomy for cancer using the International Esodata Study Group (IESG) database, the largest existing prospective, multicenter cohort reporting standardized postoperative outcomes.
In this diagnostic/prognostic study, we performed a retrospective analysis of patients from 39 institutions in 19 countries between January 1, 2015, and December 31, 2019. Patients with esophageal cancer were randomly assigned to development and validation cohorts. A scoring system that predicted death within 90 days based on logistic regression β coefficients was conducted. A final prognostic score was determined and categorized into homogeneous risk groups that predicted death within 90 days. Calibration and discrimination tests were assessed between cohorts.
Esophageal resection for cancer of the esophagus and gastroesophageal junction.
All-cause postoperative 90-day mortality.
A total of 8403 patients (mean [SD] age, 63.6 [9.0] years; 6641 [79.0%] male) were included. The 30-day mortality rate was 2.0% (n = 164), and the 90-day mortality rate was 4.2% (n = 353). Development (n = 4172) and validation (n = 4231) cohorts were randomly assigned. The multiple logistic regression model identified 10 weighted point variables factored into the prognostic score: age, sex, body mass index, performance status, myocardial infarction, connective tissue disease, peripheral vascular disease, liver disease, neoadjuvant treatment, and hospital volume. The prognostic scores were categorized into 5 risk groups: very low risk (score, ≥1; 90-day mortality, 1.8%), low risk (score, 0; 90-day mortality, 3.0%), medium risk (score, -1 to -2; 90-day mortality, 5.8%), high risk (score, -3 to -4: 90-day mortality, 8.9%), and very high risk (score, ≤-5; 90-day mortality, 18.2%). The model was supported by nonsignificance in the Hosmer-Lemeshow test. The discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve) was 0.68 (95% CI, 0.64-0.72) in the development cohort and 0.64 (95% CI, 0.60-0.69) in the validation cohort.
In this study, on the basis of preoperative variables, the IESG risk prediction model allowed stratification of an individual patient’s risk of death within 90 days after esophagectomy. These data suggest that this model can help in the decision-making process when esophageal cancer surgery is being considered and in informed consent.
About The Expert
Xavier Benoit D’Journo
David Boulate
Alex Fourdrain
Anderson Loundou
Mark I van Berge Henegouwen
Suzanne S Gisbertz
J Robert O’Neill
Arnulf Hoelscher
Guillaume Piessen
Jan van Lanschot
Bas Wijnhoven
Blair Jobe
Andrew Davies
Paul M Schneider
Manuel Pera
Magnus Nilsson
Philippe Nafteux
Yuko Kitagawa
Christopher R Morse
Wayne Hofstetter
Daniela Molena
Jimmy Bok-Yan So
Arul Immanuel
Simon L Parsons
Michael Hareskov Larsen
James P Dolan
Stephanie G Wood
Nick Maynard
Mark Smithers
Sonia Puig
Simon Law
Ian Wong
Andrew Kennedy
Wang KangNing
John V Reynolds
C S Pramesh
Mark Ferguson
Gail Darling
Wolfgang Schröder
Marc Bludau
Tim Underwood
Richard van Hillegersberg
Andrew Chang
Ivan Cecconello
Ulysses Ribeiro
Giovanni de Manzoni
Riccardo Rosati
MadhanKumar Kuppusamy
Pascal Alexandre Thomas
Donald E Low
References
PubMed