Abstract

Background: The aim of this study was to establish a precise prognostic model, based on significant clinical parameters, for predicting the overall survival (OS) of adult patients with primary gastrointestinal diffuse large B cell lymphoma (GI DLBCL).Materials and Methods: The data of 7,121 GI DLBCL patients, diagnosed between 1997 and 2015, were obtained from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database. These patients were randomly divided into two sequential cohorts: training (n = 5,697) set and validation (n = 1,424) set. ROC methodology and calibration curves were explicitly used to evaluate the predictive performance of nomogram.Results: The median OS in the training cohort was 76 months (1–239 months), and 3, 5, and 10-year OS rates were 60.3, 53.9, and 39.5%, respectively. Age at diagnosis, Ann Arbor stage, and marital status were important clinical predictors of OS. These characteristics were used to build a nomogram. The AUC of the nomogram for predicting 3, 5, and 10-year OS were 0.669, 0.692, and 0.740, respectively. All RUC and calibration curves revealed good accuracy in predicting prognosis of GI DLBCL.Conclusion: In summary, the established nomogram was validated to predict OS for adult patients with GI DLBCL. This predictive model could help clinicians identify high-risk patients to improve their prognosis.

Highlights

  • The primary gastrointestinal (GI) lymphoma is the most common type of extranodal lymphomas, accounting for about 25% of all primary extranodal lymphomas [1]

  • A total of 7,121 adult GI diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) patients were identified from the SEER database

  • More and more studies showed that primary GI DLBCL had different clinical characteristics and treatment outcomes from nodal DLBCL [13,14,15]

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Summary

Introduction

The primary gastrointestinal (GI) lymphoma is the most common type of extranodal lymphomas, accounting for about 25% of all primary extranodal lymphomas [1]. Primary GI lymphoma constitutes only about 1–4% of all GI cancers [2]. Histopathological findings reveal the following types: marginal zone lymphoma (MALT), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), enteropathy-associated lymphoma (EATL), mantle cell lymphoma (MCL), and others. DLBCL is the most common GI lymphoma with a prevalence estimated at 40–50% [2, 3]. The most common histological type is mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma [4]. The aim of this study was to establish a precise prognostic model, based on significant clinical parameters, for predicting the overall survival (OS) of adult patients with primary gastrointestinal diffuse large B cell lymphoma (GI DLBCL)

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