Objective: Hypoalbuminemia has been reported as a risk factor for post-operative complications and unfavorable survival in cancer patients. We aimed to evaluate the predictive value of preoperative serum albumin levels on post-operative complication rate and the impact on overall survival (OS) in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) undergoing primary cytoreductive surgery.
Methods: The present retrospective study included 604 consecutive patients with EOC who underwent primary cytoreductive surgery at two tertiary cancer centers specialized in gynecologic oncology. Hypoalbuminemia was defined as a pre-operative serum albumin level≤35g/L. Post-operative surgical complications were graded according to the Clavien-Dindo-Classification (CDC). Fisher-test was used to investigate the predictive value of hypoalbuminemia on the rate of severe post-operative complications. Survival analyses were calculated using log-rank test and Cox regression models.
Results: The incidence of pre-operative hypoalbuminemia in the entire cohort was 16.4%. Hypoalbuminemia was a predictive factor for severe post-operative complications (CDC 3-5) (OR 3.65, (CI95% 1.59--8.39); p=0.002). Furthermore, median overall survival time of patients with hypoalbuminemia was 24 months compared to 83 months in patients with normal albumin (p<0.001), respectively. Hypoalbuminemia was independently associated with shortened overall survival (HR 2.2 (95% CI 1.6-3.0); p<0.001) even after adjusting established prognostic factors such as age, tumor stage, performance status, and post-operative residual disease.
Conclusion: Pre-operative hypoalbuminemia can be used as both an independent predictive factor for severe post-operative complications and as prognostic parameter regarding overall survival in EOC patients. Therefore, albumin levels may be incorporated into future clinical trials as stratification factor.
Keywords: Complication rate; Epithelial ovarian cancer; Low serum albumin; Mortality; Overall survival.
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