Study Type – Prognosis (inception cohort series)
Level of Evidence 2a
What's known on the subject? and What does the study add?
ECOG Performance Status has gained wide popularity as an integral part of the assessment of patients with upper urinary tract carcinoma. Our findings indicate that ECOG‐PS is strongly associated with perioperative and overall survival and should be considered carefully in our decision‐making process.
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the prognostic role of ECOG Performance status (ECOG‐PS) in a large multi‐institutional international cohort of patients treated with radical nephroureterectomy for upper tract urothelial carcinoma.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Data of 427 patients treated with radical nephroureterectomy at five international institutions in Asia, Europe and Northern America were collected retrospectively from 1987 to 2008.
Logistic and Cox regression models were used for univariable and multivariable analyses.
RESULTS
ECOG‐PS was 0 in 272 of 427 (64%) patients. The median follow‐up of the whole cohort was 32 months.
The five‐year recurrence‐free (RFS), cancer‐specific (CSS) and overall (OS) survival estimates were 71.7%, 74.9% and 68.5%, respectively, in patients with ECOG‐PS 0 compared with 60.1%, 67.8%, and 51.4% respectively, in patients with ECOG‐PS ≥1 (P value 0.08 for RFS, 0.43 for CSS, and <0.001 for OS, respectively).
On multivariable Cox regression analyses, ECOG‐PS was not an independent predictor of either RFS (hazard ratio 1.4; P = 0.107) or CSS (hazard ratio 1.2; P = 0.426) but was an independent predictor of OS (hazard ratio 1.5; P = 0.03).
CONCLUSIONS
In this large multicentre international study, ECOG‐PS was not significantly associated with RFS and CSS.
Conversely we find a strong association with survival 1‐month after surgery and OS. Further research is needed to ascertain the additive prognostic role of ECOG‐PS in well‐designed prospective multicentre studies.
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