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Prognosis of patients with intermediate risk IPSS-R myelodysplastic syndrome indicates variable outcomes and need for models beyond IPSS-R.

Christopher B BentonMaliha KhanDavid SallmanAziz NazhaGraciela M Nogueras GonzálezJin PiaoJing NingFleur AungNajla Al AliElias J JabbourTapan Mahendra KadiaGautam BorthakurFarhad RavandiSherry PierceDavid SteensmaAmy DeZernGail RobozMikkael SekeresMichael AndreeffHagop M KantarjianRami S KomrokjiGuillermo Garcia-Manero
Published in: American journal of hematology (2018)
The International Prognostic Scoring System-Revised (IPSS-R) is one standard for myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) risk stratification. It divides patients into five categories including an intermediate subset (IPSS-R int-risk). Outcomes and clinical interventions for patients with IPSS-R int-risk are not well defined. We performed an analysis of outcomes of this group of patients. Out of 3167 patients, a total of 298 were identified with IPSS-R int-risk MDS and retrospectively analyzed to assess characteristics affecting outcomes. Cox proportional hazard models for overall survival (OS) were performed to identify statistically significant clinical factors that influence survival. Age of 66 years or greater, peripheral blood blasts of 2% or more, and history of red blood cell (RBC) transfusion were significantly associated with inferior survival. Based on these features, MDS patients with IPSS-R int-risk were classified into two prognostic risk groups for analysis, an int-favorable group and an int-adverse group, and had significantly divergent outcomes. Sequential prognostication was validated using two independent datasets comprising over 700 IPSS-R int-risk patients. The difference in median survival between int-favorable and int-adverse patients was 3.7 years in the test cohort, and 1.8 and 2.0 years in the two validation cohorts. These results confirm significantly variable outcomes of patients with IPSS-R int-risk and need for different prognostic systems.
Keyphrases
  • ejection fraction
  • newly diagnosed
  • peripheral blood
  • metabolic syndrome
  • red blood cell
  • physical activity
  • drug induced