Have you ever read a scientific article on cancer treatment results? If you have, you must have encountered terms related to survival that left you a little bit confused. Doctors use many different survival terms to describe prognosis and treatment outcomes. Here are 6 terms commonly used to describe survival. Click on each term for an explanation with examples.
Median survival is the measure of how long individuals will live with a certain disease or treatment. The chance of living beyond the time denoted by the median survival is 50%.
Overall survival is an indication of the proportion of people within a group who are expected to be alive after a specified time. It takes into account death due to any cause - both related and unrelated to the cancer in question.
Cause-specific survival is a term similar to overall survival. It measures the proportion of people who are expected to die due to the cancer at a specified time. Unlike overall survival, it excludes death due to causes unrelated to the cancer.
Disease-free survival measures the proportion of people among those treated for a cancer who will remain free of disease at a specified time after treatment.
Progression-free survival measures the proportion of people among those treated for a cancer whose disease will remain stable (without signs of progression) at a specified time after treatment.
Event-free survival is a measure of the proportion of people who remain free of a particular complication of disease (called an event) after treatment that is designed to prevent or delay that particular complication.