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Prognostic value of the preoperative albumin-bilirubin score among patients with stages I-III gastric cancer undergoing radical resection: A retrospective study.

Xiang WangJingwei ZhengHui YangXinxin YangWentao CaiXiaodong ChenWeiteng ZhangXian Shen
Published in: Clinical and translational science (2023)
The albumin-bilirubin (ALBI) score was originally used to accurately assess liver dysfunction and predict the prognoses of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. Following its more recent application to patients with gastrointestinal tumors, this study analyzed the prognostic value of the ALBI score in Chinese patients with advanced resectable (tumor-node-metastasis [TNM] stages I-III) gastric cancer (GC). This study investigated 1,185 patients with advanced GC, including 429 with TNM stage I; the patients were divided into training and verifications groups (593 and 592 patients, respectively), in which these patients were classified high-risk (ALBI score ≥-2.65) and low-risk (ALBI score (<-2.65) groups. Univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses were performed, and a visual survival prediction model (nomogram) was created. On Kaplan-Meier analysis, patients who were low-risk and high-risk according to their ALBI scores had significantly different survival rates in both the training and verification groups (p<0.01). The difference was also significant when analyzing only patients with TNM stage I GC (p=0.031). Univariate and multivariate analyses showed that the ALBI score (p=0.014), age (p<0.001), Nutritional Risk Screening 2002 score (p=0.024), sarcopenia (p=0.049), Tumor differentiation (p=0.027) and TNM stage (p<0.001) were independent risk factors for survival. Our survival prediction model that incorporating the ALBI score accurately predicted the 5-year survival rate of Chinese patients with GC. Therefore, the ALBI score is a valid clinical indicator and good predictor of survival after surgery for progressive GC. Moreover, this score is simple to derive and does not burden patients with additional costs.
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