Pretreatment serum albumin as a predictor of cancer survival: A systematic review of the epidemiological literature
Midwestern Regional Medical Center · Cancer Treatment Centers of America
Abstract
There are several methods of assessing nutritional status in cancer of which serum albumin is one of the most commonly used. In recent years, the role of malnutrition as a predictor of survival in cancer has received considerable attention. As a result, it is reasonable to investigate whether serum albumin has utility as a prognostic indicator of cancer survival in cancer. This review summarizes all available epidemiological literature on the association between pretreatment serum albumin levels and survival in different types of cancer.
A systematic search of the literature using the MEDLINE database (January 1995 through June 2010) to identify epidemiologic studies on the relationship between serum albumin and cancer survival. To be included in the review, a study must have: been published in English, reported on data collected in humans with any type of cancer, had serum albumin as one of the or only predicting factor, had survival as one of the outcome measures (primary or secondary) and had any of the following study designs (case-control, cohort, cross-sectional, case-series prospective, retrospective, nested case-control, ecologic, clinical trial, meta-analysis).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 98
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Cancer
- Internal medicine
- Serum albumin
- Epidemiology
- Albumin
- Oncology
- Confounding
- Zero hunger