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Body Composition as an Independent Predictive and Prognostic Biomarker in Advanced Urothelial Carcinoma Patients Treated with Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors.

Dylan J MartiniJulie M ShabtoSubir GoyalYuan LiuT Anders OlsenSean T EvansBenjamin L MagodDeepak RavindranathanJacqueline T BrownLauren YantorniGreta Anne RusslerSarah CaulfieldJamie M GoldmanBassel NazhaShreyas Subhash JoshiHaydn T KissickKenneth E OganWayne B HarrisOmer KucukBradley C CarthonViraj A MasterMehmet Asim Bilen
Published in: The oncologist (2021)
This study developed a prognostic body composition risk scoring system using radiographic biomarkers for patients with bladder cancer treated with immunotherapy. The study found that the high-risk patients had significantly worse clinical outcomes. Notably, the study's model was better at predicting outcomes than body mass index. Importantly, these results suggest that radiographic measures of body composition should be considered for inclusion in updated prognostic models for patients with urothelial carcinoma treated with immunotherapy. These findings are useful for practicing oncologists in the academic or community setting, particularly given that baseline imaging is routine for patients starting on treatment with immunotherapy.
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