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The“Newcastle Nomogram”—Statistical modelling predicts malignant transformation in potentially malignant disorders
Author(s) -
Goodson Michaela L.,
Smith Daniel R.,
Thomson Peter J.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of oral pathology and medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1600-0714
pISSN - 0904-2512
DOI - 10.1111/jop.12881
Subject(s) - nomogram , malignant transformation , medicine , pathology , oncology
Background Nomograms are graphical calculating devices used to predict risk of malignant transformation (MT) or response to treatment during cancer management. To date, a nomogram has not been used to predict clinical outcome during oral potentially malignant disorder (PMD) treatment. The aim of this study was to create a nomogram for use by clinicians to predict the probability of MT, thereby facilitating accurate assessment of risk and objective decision‐making during individual patient management. Methods Clinico‐pathological data from a previously treated cohort of 590 newly presenting PMD patients were reviewed and clinical outcomes categorized as disease free, persistent PMD or MT. Multiple logistic regression was used to predict the probability of MT in the cohort using age, gender, lesion type, site and incision biopsy histopathological diagnoses. Internal validation and calibration of the model was performed using the bootstrap method (n = 1000), and bias‐corrected indices of model performance were computed. Results Potentially malignant disorders were predominantly leukoplakias (79%), presenting most frequently at floor of mouth and lateral tongue sites (51%); 99 patients (17%) developed oral squamous cell carcinoma during the study period. The nomogram performed well when MT predictions were compared with patient outcome data, demonstrating good bias‐corrected discrimination and calibration ( D xy = 0.58; C = 0.790), with a sensitivity of 87% and specificity 63%, and a positive predictive value of 32% and negative predictive value 96%. Conclusion The “Newcastle Nomogram” has been developed to predict the probability of MT in PMD, based on an internally validated statistical model. Based upon readily available and patient‐specific clinico‐pathological data, it provides clinicians with a pragmatic diagrammatic aid for clinical decision‐making during diagnosis and management of PMD.