Abstract

Background Red blood cell distribution width (RDW) is a clinical index used to make early diagnosis and to monitor treatment effects in iron deficiency anemia. Recently, several studies have suggested that RDW was associated with mortality from various cancers; however, there has been little evidence regarding RDW and cancer as a whole. Therefore, the purpose of our study was to investigate the relationship of RDW and overall cancer mortality in hospital. Methods We extracted patient data from the Multiparameter Intelligent Monitoring in Intensive Care Database III version 1.3 (MIMICIII.1.3). RDW was measured prior to hospital admission. Patients older than 18 who were diagnosed with malignant tumors were included. The primary outcome was cancer mortality in hospital. Logistic regression and multivariate analysis were used to assess the association between the RDW and hospital mortality. Result A total of 3384 eligible patients were enrolled. A positive correlation was observed between RDW and overall cancer mortality. Patients with higher RDW (14.4-16.3%, 16.4-30.5%) were at greater risk of death than the patients with RDW in the reference range (11.5-14.3%). On multivariate analysis, when adjusted for age and gender, the adjusted OR (95% CIs) in the mid-RDW group and high-RDW group were 1.61 (1.28, 2.03) and 2.52 (2.03, 3.13), respectively, with the low-RDW group set as the baseline. Similar trends were also observed in the model adjusted for other clinical characteristics. This suggested that elevated RDW was related to increased risk of cancer mortality, and RDW may play an important role in the prediction of short-term mortality after hospitalization in cancer patients. Conclusion Elevated RDW was associated with overall cancer mortality. To a certain extent, RDW may predict the risk of mortality in patients with cancers; it was an independent prognostic indicator of short-term mortality after hospitalization in cancer patients.

Highlights

  • Cancer imposes a serious disease burden worldwide, with high incidence and mortality [1]

  • Several studies have reported that red blood cell distribution width (RDW) was associated with mortality in various cancers; there was substantially less evidence regarding RDW and all-combined cancer [7,8,9,10]

  • According to RDW value, patients were divided into three groups

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer imposes a serious disease burden worldwide, with high incidence and mortality [1]. Several studies have reported that red blood cell distribution width (RDW) was associated with mortality in various cancers; there was substantially less evidence regarding RDW and all-combined cancer [7,8,9,10]. The purpose of our study was to investigate the relationship of RDW and overall cancer mortality in hospital. Similar trends were observed in the model adjusted for other clinical characteristics This suggested that elevated RDW was related to increased risk of cancer mortality, and RDW may play an important role in the prediction of shortterm mortality after hospitalization in cancer patients. RDW may predict the risk of mortality in patients with cancers; it was an independent prognostic indicator of short-term mortality after hospitalization in cancer patients

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