Can LENT Prognostic score (LDH, ECOG performance score, blood neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio, tumor type) change the clinical approach in malignant pleural effusion?

2021 
Introduction The aim of this study was to evaluate the predictive power of LENT (LDH in pleural fluid, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group [ECOG] performance status, neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio in the serum, and tumor type) score which is a current prognostic score in patients with MPE and to determine its effect on survival and its status in clinical decision making. In addition, it was aimed to compare LENT score with the conventional but subjective score ECOG. Materials and Methods A retrospective observational study was conducted reviewing the medical records of patients managed for MPE (malign pleural effusion) between 2008 and 2018. LENT prognostic score was calculated in the patients. The ECOG score calculated for the same patients was compared in terms of mortality. Result A total of 191 patients with malignant pleural effusion, 118 males (61.7%) and 73 females (38.2%), were included in the study. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV) for identifying overall survival were 69.8 %, 100%, 100% and 18.8%, respectively at the LENT score > 4 (p= 0.000). At ECOG PS >2, the sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV were as the same as the LENT score >4 for identifying overall survival. In all patients, overall median survival according to the LENT score was 662/119/33 days in low/moderate/high risk groups, respectively. Cox regression analysis indicated that having a moderate LENT score (p= 0.004, OR: 2.21, CI: 1.29 -3.78%) and high LENT score (p= 0.000, OR: 4, 50 CI: 2.57-7.89%) were predictors for overall survival in all patients due to MPE. In ROC analysis, there was no difference in mortality in erms of both LENT and ECOG at 1st, 6th and 12th months. Conclusions LENT is a better scoring system than ECOG in predicting early mortality, while both ECOG and LENT have almost the same power in predicting mortality. However, LENT is slightly more objective but more difficult to calculate because it contains laboratory findings. Thus, both scoring systems can be used to predict mortality in patients with malignant pleural effusions. Neither of them has superiority to each other.
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