Abstract

BackgroundLymph node ratio (LNR) has been increasingly reported as a prognostic factor in oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC). This study aimed to develop and validate a prognostic nomogram integrating LNR and to further assess its role in guiding adjuvant therapy for OCSCC. MethodsA total of 8703 OCSCC patients treated primarily with surgery in the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database were retrieved and randomly divided into training and validation cohorts. The nomogram was created based on the factors identified by Cox model. The value of PORT and chemotherapy was respectively evaluated in each prognostic group according to nomogram-deduced individualized score. ResultsThe final nomogram included tumor site, grade, T stage, number of positive lymph nodes and LNR. Calibration plots demonstrated a good match between predicted and observed rates of overall survival (OS). The concordance indexes for training and validation cohorts were 0.720 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.708, 0.732) and 0.711 (95% CI: 0.687, 0.735), both significantly higher than did TNM stage (p< 0.001). According to individualized nomogram score, patients were stratified into three subgroups with significantly distinct outcome. PORT presented survival benefit among medium- and high-risk groups whereas a near-detrimental effect in low-risk group. Chemotherapy was found to be beneficial only in high-risk group. ConclusionThis LNR-incorporated nomogram surpassed the conventional TNM stage in predicting prognosis of patients with non-metastatic OCSCC and identified sub-settings that could gain survival benefit from adjuvant thearpy.

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