Individual patient-reported symptom items discriminate imaging-graded dysphagia in head and neck cancer patients treated with radiotherapy: secondary analysis of pooled prospective studies

个体患者自述症状项目可区分接受放射治疗的头颈癌患者的影像学分级吞咽困难:前瞻性研究汇总的二次分析

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: To determine clinically actionable thresholds for the MD Anderson Symptom Inventory-Head and Neck (MDASI-HN) -Swallow and -Choke items by comparing discriminant capacity against imaging-based markers of dysphagia in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients undergoing (chemo)radiotherapy (RT). MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective secondary analysis used single-institution prospective registries of HNC patients treated with RT who completed the MDASI-HN and a modified barium swallow (MBS) before, during, or after RT. The DynamicImaging Grade ofSwallowing Toxicity(DIGEST) overall (D), efficiency (E), and safety (S) scores were compared to a priori-defined (≥6) and data-driven thresholds using binomial regression. Diagnostic accuracy was evaluated using sensitivity (SN), specificity (SP), PPV and NPV, using DIGEST D, E, S ≥ 1 (any impairment) and ≥ 2 (moderate-severe) as reference standards. RESULTS: Among 264 patients (mean age 62; 87 % male; 47 % nasopharyngeal cancer; 55 % post-RT), -Swallow ≥ 6 was associated with D ≥ 1 and D ≥ 2 (RRs = 1.8-2.6, p < 0.05), showing high SP (92-95 %) but low SN (23-30 %). -Choke ≥ 6 demonstrated stronger associations for D ≥ 2 (RR = 3.5, p < 0.05), and similar SN/SP tradeoffs. Data-driven thresholds improved accuracy: for D ≥ 1, a combined threshold (-Swallow or -Choke) ≥ 2 yielded SN 77 %, SP 64 %; for D ≥ 2, -Choke ≥ 1 showed SN 85 %, SP 69 %, while -Choke ≥ 2 increased SP to 84 %. For aspiration risk (S ≥ 2), -Choke ≥ 1 had SN 88 %, SP 66 %; -Choke ≥ 2 improved SP to 83 %. CONCLUSION: MDASI-Swallow and -Choke correlate with imaging-based dysphagia. While ≥ 6 may flag moderate-severe impairment, lower thresholds (≥1-2) offer better sensitivity, supporting early detection. Combined thresholds may enhance screening and guide survivorship care.

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