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The assessment of Ki-67 as a prognostic marker in neuroendocrine tumours: a systematic review and meta-analysis

The assessment of Ki-67 as a prognostic marker in neuroendocrine tumours: a systematic review and meta-analysis
The assessment of Ki-67 as a prognostic marker in neuroendocrine tumours: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Introduction Gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (GEP NETs) are classified according to tumour mitotic count or Ki-67 labelling index (LI).Aim(s) To systematically review articles reporting the prognosis of patients by Ki-67 LI and thereby improve the ability of clinicians to prognosticate for their patients.Method 265 abstracts were identified relating Ki-67 and survival. After exclusion criteria were applied, 22 articles remained. Articles were excluded if they described non-human specimens, were non-English language, published prior to 2000, reported non-GEP NETs, reported subgroups selected by treatment modality or included <20 cases. Random-effects meta-analysis was used to combine studies to estimate survival proportions.Results Authors used varied methods in which to present 5-year survival, with often limited survival information. This reduced the number of studies that could be included in the meta-analysis. 5-year survival for patients with grade 1 and 2 GEP NETs were estimated to be 89% (95% CI 85% to 92%, m=12 studies, n=977 participants) and 70% (95% CI 62% to 79%, m=9, n=726), respectively. Using an alternative grade 1/2 boundary of 5%, 5-year survival rates for Ki-67≤5% and 5–20% were estimated as 89% (95% CI 84% to 94%, m=7, n=654) and 51% (95% CI 44% to 59%, m=4, n=183), respectively. For Ki-67>20%, 5-year survival was estimated to be 25% (95% CI 12% to 38%, m=10, n=208).Conclusions Standardisation of grade boundaries has allowed us to combine data from multiple studies and amass a body of evidence linking Ki-67 and survival.
0021-9746
612-618
Richards-Taylor, Sebastian
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Ewings, Sean M
326656df-c0f0-44a1-b64f-8fe9578ca18a
Jaynes, Eleanor
dae2d9a2-5cda-46a4-aa7e-4d04e495fe65
Tilley, Charles
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Ellis, Sarah G.
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Armstrong, Thomas
87e647d5-d191-4d3e-bebb-bbea344f4333
Pearce, Neil
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Cave, Judith
60c67e39-121a-49ca-8594-93e8e456464f
Richards-Taylor, Sebastian
7c8ce92b-6992-4d5d-9fdc-7d5ae0ae136f
Ewings, Sean M
326656df-c0f0-44a1-b64f-8fe9578ca18a
Jaynes, Eleanor
dae2d9a2-5cda-46a4-aa7e-4d04e495fe65
Tilley, Charles
79c8321c-a61c-4c2c-b74f-9bcb213b1181
Ellis, Sarah G.
8ff07d13-46d1-4025-94be-f94bec62f931
Armstrong, Thomas
87e647d5-d191-4d3e-bebb-bbea344f4333
Pearce, Neil
06acd03a-6ed1-4b9b-851c-391dd50264e4
Cave, Judith
60c67e39-121a-49ca-8594-93e8e456464f

Richards-Taylor, Sebastian, Ewings, Sean M, Jaynes, Eleanor, Tilley, Charles, Ellis, Sarah G., Armstrong, Thomas, Pearce, Neil and Cave, Judith (2016) The assessment of Ki-67 as a prognostic marker in neuroendocrine tumours: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Clinical Pathology, 69 (7), 612-618. (doi:10.1136/jclinpath-2015-203340).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction Gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumours (GEP NETs) are classified according to tumour mitotic count or Ki-67 labelling index (LI).Aim(s) To systematically review articles reporting the prognosis of patients by Ki-67 LI and thereby improve the ability of clinicians to prognosticate for their patients.Method 265 abstracts were identified relating Ki-67 and survival. After exclusion criteria were applied, 22 articles remained. Articles were excluded if they described non-human specimens, were non-English language, published prior to 2000, reported non-GEP NETs, reported subgroups selected by treatment modality or included <20 cases. Random-effects meta-analysis was used to combine studies to estimate survival proportions.Results Authors used varied methods in which to present 5-year survival, with often limited survival information. This reduced the number of studies that could be included in the meta-analysis. 5-year survival for patients with grade 1 and 2 GEP NETs were estimated to be 89% (95% CI 85% to 92%, m=12 studies, n=977 participants) and 70% (95% CI 62% to 79%, m=9, n=726), respectively. Using an alternative grade 1/2 boundary of 5%, 5-year survival rates for Ki-67≤5% and 5–20% were estimated as 89% (95% CI 84% to 94%, m=7, n=654) and 51% (95% CI 44% to 59%, m=4, n=183), respectively. For Ki-67>20%, 5-year survival was estimated to be 25% (95% CI 12% to 38%, m=10, n=208).Conclusions Standardisation of grade boundaries has allowed us to combine data from multiple studies and amass a body of evidence linking Ki-67 and survival.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 November 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 December 2015
Published date: 20 June 2016

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Local EPrints ID: 420264
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/420264
ISSN: 0021-9746
PURE UUID: ef65ba2d-5e97-4ded-a0e7-fe73cae2de0a
ORCID for Sean M Ewings: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7214-4917

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Date deposited: 03 May 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Sebastian Richards-Taylor
Author: Sean M Ewings ORCID iD
Author: Eleanor Jaynes
Author: Charles Tilley
Author: Sarah G. Ellis
Author: Thomas Armstrong
Author: Neil Pearce
Author: Judith Cave

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