Prognostic value of pretreatment systemic inflammatory markers in patients with stage I endometrial cancer
Abstract
Objective: Evaluate the prognostic value of monocyte-lymphocyte ratio (MLR) in patients with stage I
endometrial cancer.
Method: Data from 225 patients with stage I endometrioid endometrial cancer who underwent surgical
resection between January 2010 and December 2020 were reviewed. The receiver operating
characteristic (ROC) curves were generated for the neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio, platelet-lymphocyte
ratio, and MLR. Optimal cut-off values were determined as the points at which the Youden index
(sensitivity + specificity - 1) was maximal. Based on the results of the ROC curve analysis, the patients
were grouped into high MLR and low MLR groups. Recurrence rate, and disease-free survival were
compared between the two groups. The prognostic factors were investigated using univariate and
multivariate Cox proportional hazards model.
Results: The optimal cut-off value of MLR was 0.220 (AUC, 0.835; p < 0.001). Significantly more patients
in the high MLR group experienced recurrence (20.3% vs. 1.9%, p < 0.0001). In multivariate analysis,
grade, depth of myometrial invasion, adjuvant RT, and high MLR were independent prognostic factors for
disease-free survival.
Conclusion: Elevated MLR was significantly associated poor clinical outcomes in patients with stage I
endometrioid endometrial cancer. Our findings suggest that MLR may be clinically reliable and useful as an
independent prognostic marker for patients with stage I endometrioid endometrial cancer
Keywords:
endometrial cancer
uterine cancer
systemic inflammation reponse
adverse risk factors
monocyte-lymphocyte ratio
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