ECOG Performance Status Shows a Stronger Association with Treatment Tolerability Than Some Multidimensional Scales in Elderly Patients Diagnosed with Hematological Malignancies

ECOG performance status (ECOG; Oken, 1982) is a unidimensional tool that does not measure independently patient general condition prior to diagnosis (Dx) and may modified by pre-phase therapy (Rx). Multidimensional evaluation of patient general condition is currently recommended by NCCN, ASCO and EO...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Blood 2020-11, Vol.136 (Supplement 1), p.15-16
Hauptverfasser: Ramos, Fernando, Castellanos, Marta, De las Heras, Natalia, Escalante, Fernando, Fernandez-Ferrero, Silvia, Vidal, Maria Jesus, Villalobos, Maria Lavinia
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:ECOG performance status (ECOG; Oken, 1982) is a unidimensional tool that does not measure independently patient general condition prior to diagnosis (Dx) and may modified by pre-phase therapy (Rx). Multidimensional evaluation of patient general condition is currently recommended by NCCN, ASCO and EORTC in elderly patients with cancer, commonly used as a predictor of life-expectancy and as a tool for detecting and palliate any underlying deficits. Treatment tolerability (TOL) can be predicted in patients with solid neoplasms by dedicated tools such as CARG (Hurria, 2011) and CRASH (Extermann, 2012), but they are not readily applicable to hematologic malignancies because these neoplasms, and the most commonly used therapeutic schemas in this group of diseases, have not been part of their clinical development. Our study aims to analyze the eventual association between TOL and the categories of commonly used multidimensional scales, such as the Geriatric Assessment in Hematology (GAH; Bonanad, 2015) and the Lee Index for Older Adults (LEE; Lee, 2006), in elderly patients receiving first-line immuno/chemotherapy. We have analyzed a prospective cohort of 182 adult patients diagnosed with hematologic malignancies in our center during the calendar year 2008. All patients gave written informed consent and the study was approved by our IRB. One hundred nine patients were older than 65 years and had their chart reviewed and general condition evaluated by ECOG, GAH and LEE (Table 1). Those aged 75 and over also received a Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment and were categorized as robust or non-robust. Seventy nine received immuno/chemotherapy (standard 53, attenuated 26) while 30 patients received only minimal Rx (supportive care or watch & wait). TOL was defined as the ability to receive Rx without modifications and measured by 2 composite endpoints: ’basic’ and ’extended’ TOL. Basic TOL included either: 1) dose reduction, 2) course delay, 3) drug elimination, or 4) Rx shortening/discontinuation not due to progressive disease; extended TOL also included 2 additional items, namely, 5) non-programmed hospital admission or 6) death during the first-line Rx. We followed standard statistical procedures including stepwise logistic regression, adjusting for 1) age (continuous), 2) gender, 3) diagnostic group, 4) physician, 5) prognostic subset (favorable, intermediate or unfavorable) specific for each diagnostic group, 6) ECOG (0-4) and 7) Rx type (standard vs attenuated).
ISSN:0006-4971
1528-0020
DOI:10.1182/blood-2020-136732