A Clinical Nomogram to Predict Survival Outcomes in Patients with Well-Differentiated Thyroid Cancer

article
Autores

Valero, Cristina

Eagan, Alana

Adilbay, Dauren

Matsuura, Danielli

Harries, Victoria

Shaha, Ashok R.

Shah, Jatin P.

Tuttle, R. Michael

Akhmedin, Darkhan

Pinheiro, Renan Aguera

Matos, Leandro Luongo

Kowalski, Luiz P.

Adilbayev, Galym

Kadyrbayeva, Rabiga

Patel, Snehal G.

Ganly, Ian

Data de Publicação

1 de abril de 2025

Resumo

Background: The current American Joint Committee on Cancer 8th edition staging system on thyroid cancer describes outcomes for populations of patients with well-differentiated thyroid cancer (WDTC) and not individual patients. The aim of this study was to create a clinical nomogram that can be used to predict survival in individual patients with WDTC. Methods: A single institutional cohort of 8535 patients with WDTC treated with primary surgery at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center was used to create a predictive nomogram for disease-specific survival (DSS) as a retrospective cohort study. The nomogram was created using DSS as the dependent variable, and the independent variables used were sex, age, pathology subtype, and TNM stage. An external validation cohort of 519 patients from three different international centers was used to assess the accuracy and generalizability of the nomogram. Results: Sex, age, pathology subtype, T stage, N stage, and M stage were significant predictors of DSS on univariable analysis. The nomogram created using all these variables showed an extremely high concordance index (0.963; SE 0.012). This nomogram was validated on the external patient cohort with a high concordance index (0.810; SE: 0.070). Conclusions: We describe a predictive nomogram that accurately predicts DSS in individual patients with WDTC. The external validation illustrates its generalizability. This nomogram will help in counseling individual patients on prognosis and may identify patients who could benefit from more aggressive therapy.

Citação

BibTeX
@online{cristina2025,
  author = {Cristina , Valero and Alana , Eagan and Dauren , Adilbay and
    Danielli , Matsuura and Victoria , Harries and Ashok R. , Shaha and
    Jatin P. , Shah and R. Michael , Tuttle and Darkhan , Akhmedin and
    Renan Aguera , Pinheiro and Leandro Luongo , Matos and Luiz P. ,
    Kowalski and Galym , Adilbayev and Rabiga , Kadyrbayeva and Snehal
    G. , Patel and Ian , Ganly},
  title = {A Clinical Nomogram to Predict Survival Outcomes in Patients
    with Well-Differentiated Thyroid Cancer},
  volume = {35},
  number = {4},
  date = {2025-04-01},
  doi = {10.1089/thy.2024.0486},
  langid = {pt-BR},
  abstract = {Background: The current American Joint Committee on Cancer
    8th edition staging system on thyroid cancer describes outcomes for
    populations of patients with well-differentiated thyroid cancer
    (WDTC) and not individual patients. The aim of this study was to
    create a clinical nomogram that can be used to predict survival in
    individual patients with WDTC. Methods: A single institutional
    cohort of 8535 patients with WDTC treated with primary surgery at
    the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center was used to create a
    predictive nomogram for disease-specific survival (DSS) as a
    retrospective cohort study. The nomogram was created using DSS as
    the dependent variable, and the independent variables used were sex,
    age, pathology subtype, and TNM stage. An external validation cohort
    of 519 patients from three different international centers was used
    to assess the accuracy and generalizability of the nomogram.
    Results: Sex, age, pathology subtype, T stage, N stage, and M stage
    were significant predictors of DSS on univariable analysis. The
    nomogram created using all these variables showed an extremely high
    concordance index (0.963; SE 0.012). This nomogram was validated on
    the external patient cohort with a high concordance index (0.810;
    SE: 0.070). Conclusions: We describe a predictive nomogram that
    accurately predicts DSS in individual patients with WDTC. The
    external validation illustrates its generalizability. This nomogram
    will help in counseling individual patients on prognosis and may
    identify patients who could benefit from more aggressive therapy.}
}
Por favor, cite este trabalho como:
Cristina, Valero, Eagan Alana, Adilbay Dauren, Matsuura Danielli, Harries Victoria, Shaha Ashok R., Shah Jatin P., et al. 2025. “A Clinical Nomogram to Predict Survival Outcomes in Patients with Well-Differentiated Thyroid Cancer.” Thyroid®. April 1, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2024.0486.