Abstract

BackgroundGastric cancer is common in developing regions, and we hope to find out an economical but practical prognostic indicator. It was reported that pre-treatment peripheral neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio (PLR), as well as differentiation status, were associated with cancer progression. Hence, we introduced a novel combined Neutrophil/platelet/lymphocyte/differentiation Score (cNPLDS) to improve the prediction value of palliative chemotherapeutic response in advanced gastric cancer.MethodsAccording to statistical sample size estimation, 136 primary diagnosed unresectable advanced ptaients were included for a retrospective study. The follow-up end-point was progression free survival (PFS) during the first-line palliative chemotherapy. Differentiation stratified patients into well, medium and poor groups by score 1 to 3, while patients with neither elevated NLR and PLR, only one elevated, or both elevated were of the combined NLR-PLR score (cNPS) 1 to 3, respectively. The cNPLDS was calculated by multiplying the tumor differentiation score and cNPS.ResultsDetermined by the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, the optimal cut-off points for NLR and PLR were 3.04 and 223. Through univariate analysis and survival analysis, poor differentiation, high NLR, high PLR, high cNPS, and high cNPLDS respectively indicated inferior PFS during the first-line palliative chemotherapy. Patients were furhter classified into low to high risk groups by cNPLDS. Groups of elevated NLR, PLR, cNPS, and cNPLDS showed lower disease control rate. Compared to other parameters, cNPLDS significantly improved the accuracy in predicing the first-progression.ConclusionsThis study indicates that the novel parameter cNPLDS is superior to NLR or PLR alone, or even cNPS, in predicting the first-line chemosensitivity in advanced gastric cancer.

Highlights

  • Gastric cancer is common in developing regions, and we hope to find out an economical but practical prognostic indicator

  • Chemotherapy is the main treatment for advanced unresectable gastric cancer, and the sensitivity to first-line chemotherapy has a direct impact on overall survival prognosis [25]

  • We introduce a novel prognostic parameter combined Neutrophil/platelet/lymphocyte/differentiation Score (cNPLDS), integrating systemic neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and platelet-tolymphocyte ratio (PLR) and local tumor differentiation status to predict the progression free survival (PFS) of the first-line chemotherapy in advanced gastric cancer

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Summary

Introduction

Gastric cancer is common in developing regions, and we hope to find out an economical but practical prognostic indicator. It was reported that pre-treatment peripheral neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and platelet-tolymphocyte ratio (PLR), as well as differentiation status, were associated with cancer progression. We introduced a novel combined Neutrophil/platelet/lymphocyte/differentiation Score (cNPLDS) to improve the prediction value of palliative chemotherapeutic response in advanced gastric cancer. The major treatment option for advanced unresectable gastric cancer is chemotherapy. Previous studies have demonstrated that some cancer endogenous factors, such as differentiation status [3, 4] or certain genes expression [4,5,6], may influence the efficiency of chemotherapy. We still know very little about whether there are other affordable pre-treatment factors can better predict progression free survival in advanced unresectable gastric cancer patients, which may help to optimize the treatment strategies

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