Developing an objective marker to optimize patient selection and predict survival benefit in early-phase cancer trials

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Abstract

BACKGROUND Several prognostic indices have been devised to optimize patient selection for phase 1 oncology trials with no consensus as to the optimal score and none qualifying as a marker of treatment response. METHODS Multivariate predictors of overall survival (OS) were tested on 118 referred patients to develop the Hammersmith Score (HS). The score's ability to predict OS, progression-free survival (PFS), and 90-day mortality (90DM) was compared with other prognostic indices. Changes in HS were recalculated during treatment. RESULTS Albumin < 35 g/L, lactate dehydrogenase > 450 U/L, and sodium < 135 mmol/L emerged as independent prognostic factors. These were used with equal weighting to devise the HS, a compound prognostic index ranging from 0 to 3. High (HS = 2-3) score predicted worse OS (hazard ratio [HR] = 6.5, P

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Stavraka, C., Pinato, D. J., Turnbull, S. J., Flynn, M. J., Forster, M. D., O’Cathail, S. M., … Blagden, S. P. (2014). Developing an objective marker to optimize patient selection and predict survival benefit in early-phase cancer trials. Cancer, 120(2), 262–270. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.28381

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