A Northwest Lens On Myeloma: Lies, Damned Lies, And Statistics
I was recently reminded of an important lesson about statistics that applies to multiple myeloma. Interestingly enough, I was reminded of the lesson sitting in a stadium full of soccer fans, of all places. While a regulation soccer match is 90 minutes long, the official time is kept by the referee and he or she can add a few minutes to every match to compensate for the time play was stopped for injuries or other reasons. In the 93rd minute of the last game of the regular season, the Seattle Sounders scored a goal that shattered statistics.
The regular season of Major League Soccer (MLS) starts in early March and ends in late October. Like many American sports, the regular season is followed by a playoff to declare the final champion. The Sounders won the championship in 2016 and played in the championship match, but lost, in 2017. The Sounders have advanced to the playoffs all 10 years they’ve been in the league, but in 2018 it appeared this streak would come to an end.
When the 2018 season began, the team's star forward suffered a season-ending injury in the first match. Clint Dempsey, arguably the greatest American soccer player ever, retired mid-season after barely getting on the pitch in 2018. Losses piled up early. Some close games were given away, some matches weren't even close. It seemed the season was lost before it really got going.
There are several organizations that compile sports statistics that track soccer teams' successes, and failures, game-to-game. The numbers are used to project a team's likely finishing position. In June, about mid-season, the Sounders had the worst record of 23 teams and were given only a 1.67 percent chance of making the playoffs in 2018. From my vantage point, that number seemed generous. The team looked terrible.
Many loyal fans, even in my household, wrote off the season. All objective information before us suggested the team was going to finish the season outside of the playoffs. It wasn’t a matter of giving up hope; looking at all the facts, this seemed like the only reasonable conclusion.
In July, the Sounders started winning matches, and by the end of October, they turned in the best half-season of soccer in MLS history. They not only qualified for the playoffs, but with the goal scored in the dying minutes of the last game of the season, they finished with the fourth-best record in the league.
The Sounder’s playoff games begin on November 4 (likely before this column is published). The statisticians give the Sounders only a 9 percent chance of winning the championship. Given what I learned this year, I’ve decided to ignore the numbers and just enjoy the games.
As myeloma patients, we've become pretty familiar with statistics. There are numbers everywhere we look. Every treatment comes with a spread of numbers suggesting how many patients might respond to a given treatment, how likely the response will be complete and whether or not the treatment might, in comparison to other treatments, extend a patient's progression-free and overall survivals. Of course, we are all familiar with some of the grim statistics regarding the number of months or years a myeloma patient might expect to live, regardless of treatment. As I've discussed in other columns, I'm considered a "high-risk" patient, and the statistics for the group of patients that share my chromosomal abnormality are not very cheery.
Cancer patients are often warned against giving too much stock to statistics, and for good reason. The statistics we see are merely summaries of a collection of data from a set of patients within a given category. Even within the measured collection, some patients did better and some patients did worse than the final averages and medians. There are numerous factors that influence how relevant any given data might be to our own particular case. As a single example, when discussing the overall survival of myeloma patients, one factor that can skew life expectancy statistics is the vast number of treatments that have been introduced in the last 10 years.
I'm not questioning the accuracy or validity of statistics. Statistics are critically important to researchers and doctors that are making long-term decisions about caring for myeloma patients. Statistics are especially important to draw general conclusions about a set of data from a sample. The numbers we see today are encouraging for the future of today's patients and those who follow us. There is a reason for hope for all patients, but that too is a generalization.
For individual patients, and for me in particular, how well a specific drug worked on average for a group of patients studied in a particular location during a window of time is far from a perfect prediction of how well I’ll respond to the drug. How long the average myeloma patient diagnosed in 2010 survived does not tell me whether I’m likely to to watch the 2022 World Cup or not. How well I do in treatment, how long I will survive, is controlled by too many factors, knowable and not, to make any reliable predictions.
During the post-game press conference following the last match of the regular season, the Sounder's coach was asked if, given where the team was in June, he honestly believed his team would make the 2018 playoffs. He gave a wry smile and quickly responded yes because he knew the team had it in them to turn the season around and beat the odds. The people forecasting the Sounder's final position in the league weren't wrong, they just didn't account for the many individual factors that influenced the outcome of the season.
The survival numbers and treatment reviews aren't wrong as they relate to the myeloma population overall, but they are much less relevant to any single patient. There are just so many factors that skew the numbers one way or the other. In some areas, I've already surpassed the averages for "patients like me." In other respects, I've still to reach some longer milestones.
From my perspective, the lesson of the Sounders' 2018 season is that for each individual person, none of the numbers really matter. I will do everything in my control to stay as healthy as possible. My care team will apply all methods possible to keep me healthy. I will get exactly as much time as all the factors taken together will deliver to me. Each day I'm here, though, I will sit back and enjoy the game.
UPDATE (November 9, 2018) – Unfortunately, the Sounders were eliminated from the playoffs on November 8 by their hated rivals, the Portland Timbers. Just as they had during the regular season, the Sounders played to the very end, including thirty minutes of overtime and penalty kicks to break a tie. Objective observers are calling it one of the greatest MLS playoff matches ever. The Sounders entered the match with long odds of advancing, and through multiple dramatic lead changes met the challenge and pushed the opportunity to advance to its limit.
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Mark's Photo For The Month
Centurylink Field, home to the Seattle Sounders FC (and the Seattle Seahawks) is one of the most beautiful pitches in the MLS. On many days, like this one in 2014, the view is magical. During the last 10 years I’ve found refuge from a busy life in the stands, but since my diagnosis, attending games has taken on a very special meaning and given me great joy.
Photo copyright © 2014 Mark Pouley.
Mark Pouley is a multiple myeloma patient and columnist here at The Myeloma Beacon. His column is published once a month. You can view a list of his columns here.
If you are interested in writing a regular column for The Myeloma Beacon, please contact the Beacon team at .
I agree with you about statistics. As I tell people, the number they are looking at is an average. They might well be on either side of the average. We just have to keep doing the right things to extend our lives as long as possible. As a soccer fan, I love the picture, especially the sky.
Mark, Great column! And wonderful analogy with soccer and statistics.I will remember it next time I see a statistic I wish I hadn't seen. This will be helpful for my son as well. Have a wonderful day!
Courtenay
Great column, Mark. You are right on the mark about statistics. They can be used, misused, understood, and misunderstood. I am a numbers person, and I have loved statistics ever since I took my first course in college. That being said, like you I have looked at statistics associated with cancers, including multiple myeloma, and realized that they are just numbers. As far as pertaining to the individual and all the variables associated with being an individual, they are practically meaningless. Their value rests with doctors, researchers, and policy makers looking at treatment strategies, drug approvals, and funding considerations. There is almost no value to the myeloma patient and his/her doctor and the decisions they make on care. We were filled with lots of anxiety four years ago when my husband was diagnosed with myeloma as we read the statistics on survival. Today we don’t give them a second glance. And like you, we try to enjoy each day and sit back and watch the game.
I saw my first soccer game in Europe a couple of years ago. That is when I also found out about that a referee could add minutes to a match. I came to the same revelation as you. We can do all the right things, our doctors can do all the right things, but the referee is in control as to how long the match goes on. From that moment on, I just enjoyed the game.
I absolutely loved this column. Although at times I look at my numbers and get worried, I try to focus on living my life and enjoying every day. Thank you so much for reminding us that statistics are just averages. And none of us are average. After nine years, I am feeling great. Hoping for nine more, one beautiful day at a time.
Amen to this!! I have always struggled reading statistics. Again and again I find myself not really falling in line with them, but like you said, it does give doctors a better overall picture of how to treat us. I love it that my medical team knows these things and treats me as an individual.
Once again, your photography is stunning, and our Creator, the original Artist!
Mark,
Thank you for this.
I think this is the best piece I have seen on this subject. I am not a spectator sports fan, so I would not have thought of using these analogies, but they work perfectly to clarify the use of statistics from the patient’s point of view.
Thank you all for the nice comments.
JoAnn: I hadn't even thought of the analogy of the ref keeping the time on the field and we don't really know how much is left. Another great point.
I know statistics are a lot more complicated and this isn't a perfect analogy, but it sure got me thinking about my situation.
Mark,
Great column! Sports and life - lots of connections.
Thanks for a beautiful photo.
Sylvia
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