The neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio and its utilisation for the management of cancer patients in early clinical trials
Menée et validée à partir de données portant sur 300 puis 1 000 patients atteints d'un cancer traité entre juillet 2004 et février 2014, cette étude évalue l'intérêt du rapport neutrophiles/lymphocytes pour prédire la survie globale des patients dans des essais cliniques de phase I
Background : Inflammation is critical to the pathogenesis and progression of cancer, with a high neutrophil–lymphocyte ratio (NLR) associated with poor prognosis. The utility of studying NLR in early clinical trials is unknown.
Methods : This retrospective study evaluated 1300 patients treated in phase 1 clinical trials between July 2004 and February 2014 at the Royal Marsden Hospital (RMH), UK. Data were collected on patient characteristics and baseline laboratory parameters.
Results : The test cohort recruited 300 patients; 53% were female, 35% ECOG 0 and 64% ECOG 1. RMH score was 0–1 in 66% and 2–3 in 34%. The median NLR was 3.08 (IQR 2.06–4.49). Median OS for the NLR quartiles was 10.5 months for quartile-1, 10.3 months for quartile-2, 7.9 months for quartile-3 and 6.5 months for quartile-4 (P<0.0001). Univariate analysis identified RMH score (HR=0.55, P<0.0001), ECOG (HR=0.62, P=0.002) and neutrophils (HR=0.65, P=0.003) to be associated with OS. In multivariate analysis, adjusting for RMH score, ECOG, neutrophils and tumour type, NLR remained significantly associated with OS (P=0.002), with no association with therapeutic steroid use. These results were validated in a further 1000 cancer patients. In the validation cohort, NLR was able to discriminate for OS (P=0.004), as was the RMH score. This was further improved on in the RMH score+NLR50 and RMH score+Log10NLR models, with an optimal NLR cutoff of 3.0.
Conclusions : NLR is a validated independent prognostic factor for OS in patients treated in phase 1 trials. Combining the NLR with the RMH score improves the discriminating ability for OS.
British Journal of Cancer , résumé, 2014