Abstract

Simple SummaryQuality of life (QOL) is an important patient reported outcome that effects both care and life outside of treatment. There is a shortage of nontaxing ways to determine which patients may need enhanced care over the course of their therapy and beyond to help avoid long-term declines in QOL. Therefore, we investigated whether myosteatosis as determined through existing diagnostic imaging could be used to predict QOL trajectories. In this study, patients with pretreatment myosteatosis were more likely to have lower physical and global QOL scores than patients with normal muscle density. In conclusion, myosteatosis may be a way of determining patients in need of extra assistance over the course of treatment and afterwards.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.

Highlights

  • Quality of life (QOL) is a patient-reported outcome that is important to measure both during and after cancer care since quality of life (QOL) is an important measure of quality of care [1]

  • The objective of this study was to evaluate the association of pretreatment myosteatosis with QOL trajectory in Head and neck cancer (HNC) survivors over 12 months

  • We examined skeletal muscle density (SMD) as a marker of physical resilience and determined its association with global and physical function QOL scores

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Summary

Introduction

Quality of life (QOL) is a patient-reported outcome that is important to measure both during and after cancer care since QOL is an important measure of quality of care [1]. QOL is a multidimensional construct that refers to a patient’s perceived mental and physical health status [2]. QOL can be measured via validated questionnaire and refers to multiple aspects of a patient’s life including physical, emotional, social, and cognitive functions. The questionnaires provide patients the opportunity to provide an overall, or global, QOL score. As survival times improve in patients with head and neck cancer (HNC) the trajectory of QOL becomes increasingly important [3]. QOL has been associated with survival outcomes in HNC patients [4]

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