2017 Head & neck

Competing risks analysis of cause-specific mortality in patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma.

, , , ,

Head & neck Vol. 39 (1) : 56-62 • Jan 2017

BACKGROUND: Survival studies on head and neck cancers are frequently reported with inadequate account for competing causes of death. Realistic descriptions and predictions of postdiagnosis mortality should be based on proper competing risks methodology. METHODS: Prognosis of patients with oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) in terms of mortality from OSCC and from other causes, respectively, was analyzed according to recent methodological recommendations using cumulative incidence functions and models for cause-specific hazards and subdistribution hazards in 306 patients treated in a tertiary care center in Northern Finland. RESULTS: More coherent and informative descriptions and predictions of mortality by cause were obtained with state-of-the-art statistical methods for competing risks than using the prevalent but questionable practice to graph "disease-specific survival." CONCLUSION: From the patients' perspective, proper competing risks analysis offers more relevant prognostic scenarios than naive analyses of "disease-specific survival"; therefore, it should be used in prognostic studies of head and neck cancers. (c) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Head Neck 39: 56-62, 2017.

No clinical trial protocols linked to this paper

Clinical trials are automatically linked when NCT numbers are found in the paper's title or abstract.
PICO Elements

No PICO elements extracted yet. Click "Extract PICO" to analyze this paper.

Paper Details
MeSH Terms
+2 more
Associated Data

No associated datasets or code repositories found for this paper.

Related Papers

Related paper suggestions will be available in future updates.