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New
model predicts whether patients will be free
of Renal Cancer 12 years after initial
treatment
Newswise — A UT
Southwestern Medical Center physician and
other researchers have developed a unique
statistical model that predicts the
probability of a patient being cancer free
12 years after initial surgical treatment.
The model, known as a nomogram, uses tumor
and patient characteristics to maximize
predictive accuracy. Scientists said that
knowing the likelihood of the cancer’s
return can help clinicians counsel patients
and to customize treatment recommendations
for individual patients.
The researchers built the
predictive model using data from more than
2,500 renal cancer patients in databases at
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and
the Mayo Clinic. The model is described in
June’s edition of the Journal of Urology.
“It is our hope that the nomogram will help
physicians identify and counsel patients at
high risk for cancer recurrence,” said Dr.
Ganesh Raj, assistant professor of urology
and lead author of the published study.
“If the cancer appears
only in the kidneys, it can often be treated
with a partial or radical nephrectomy,” he
said. “This nomogram is designed for use in
the initial counseling session after
diagnosis and enables patients to have a
clearer understanding of their cancer
outcomes with surgery.”
Renal cancer is the most common form of
kidney cancer. A nephrectomy, or surgical
removal of the kidney, is often the initial
treatment. Kidney cancer is notoriously
resistant to radiation therapy and
chemotherapy, although some cases respond to
immunotherapy. Recently developed molecular
therapies have also shown great promise for
treatment.
A history of smoking greatly increases the
risk for developing kidney cancer. Blood in
the urine, flank pain and a mass in the
abdomen are classic signs of renal cancer.
Unfortunately, by the time a patient
displays these symptoms, the disease is
often advanced beyond a curative stage.
In 2007, more than 51,000 new cases of renal
cancer were diagnosed in the U.S. A majority
of the tumors were discovered incidentally
in patients who had no symptoms. Because
imaging techniques such as computerized
tomography (CT) are now being used more
often for a variety of conditions, early
diagnosis of renal cancer is more common.
“Historically renal cancer was associated
with a tremendously poor diagnosis,” Dr. Raj
said. “However, more and more cases are
being diagnosed incidentally and earlier
thanks to the increased usage of imaging
techniques. A patient will have a CT scan to
evaluate unrelated symptoms and be told he
or she has a mass in the kidney.”
The nomogram relies on patient
characteristics to make a statistical
prediction. Gender, the presence or absence
of symptoms, and the mass’s size are among
the input data. For example, a woman with an
incidentally discovered, 3-centimeter renal
mass has a 96 percent chance of being cancer
free 12 years after surgery alone, Dr. Raj
said.
In comparison, a man with a 4-centimeter
renal mass found as a result of seeing his
physician after having flank pain, and with
imaging tests showing the lymph nodes are
enlarged, has less than a 40 percent chance
of being cancer free 12 years after surgery.
“This model allows us to better predict a
patient’s chances of reoccurrence even
before surgery,” Dr. Raj said. “The nomogram
is a prognostic tool physicians can use to
better counsel patients on how curable their
cancer may be with just surgery, or if
alternative treatments will likely be
needed. In the examples of the two patients
with similar sized renal masses, I might
consider using a more aggressive treatment
course and follow-up schedule for the man
than the woman based on their nomogram
results.”
Researchers from the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minn., the Mayo Medical School
and the Cleveland Clinic also participated
in the study.
Visit http://www.utsouthwestern.org/cancercenter
to learn more about UT Southwestern’s
clinical services in cancer. Visit
http://www.utsouthwestern.org/urology
for additional information about UT
Southwestern’s clinical services in urology.
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