The predictive and prognostic role of radiologically defined sarcopenia in head and neck cancer: a systematic review and multi-level meta-analysis.
Radiologically defined sarcopenia (RS), defined as a lack of skeletal muscle mass (SMM) measured on cross-sectional CT or MR imaging, is increasingly recognized as a significant prognostic determinant in head and neck cancer (HNC). A systematic literature search of Embase and Medline was performed to identify studies investigating the impact of pre-treatment sarcopenia on the prognosis of HNC patients.
All available survival and other treatment-related outcomes were extracted and analyzed in a multi-level meta-analysis. Sixty-three studies comprising data from 14,804 patients were analyzed.
The overall estimated log OR was 0.644 (95% CIโ=โ0.505-0.783, pโ<โ0.001), suggesting that patients with RS have a higher risk of worse outcomes. In 43 studies there was a significant effect of sarcopenia on survival, with a log OR of 0.808 (95% CIโ=โ0.509-1.107, pโ<โ0.001).
In 15 studies RS was shown to be a risk factor for treatment-related complications (log ORโ=โ0.669, 95% CIโ=โ0.441-0.897, pโ<โ0.001). We conclude that pre-treatment radiologically defined sarcopenia is a robust prognostic and predictive factor in HNC patients and is associated with worse survival and increased risk of treatment-related complications.