作者
Carsten Kamphues,Jérémie H. Lefèvre,Jane Wang,Neda Amini,Laurent Beaugerie,Florian Kühn,Sang Hyoung Park,Nikolaos Andreatos,Johannes C. Lauscher,Diana Enéa,Kai S. Lehmann,N. Péru,Benjamin Weixler,Julien Kirchgesner,Claudius E. Degro,Ioannis Pozios,Cornelius J. van Beekum,Sebastian Schölch,Daniela Zambonin,Christian Schineis,Florian N. Loch,Despoina Geka,Maria Theoxari,Bin Wu,Peipei Wang,Efstathios Antoniou,Emmanouil Pikoulis,Driffa Moussata,George Theodoropoulos,Mehdi Ouaïssi,Hendrik Seeliger,Yosuke Inaba,Stefano Scaringi,Christoph‐Thomas Germer,Tim O. Vilz,Lin Chen,Suk‐Kyun Yang,Katharina Beyer,Bernhard W. Renz,Kazunari Sasaki,Georgios Antonios Margonis,Magali Svrcek,Martin E. Kreis
摘要
Although primary tumor sidedness (PTS) has a known prognostic role in sporadic colorectal cancer (CRC), its role in Inflammatory Bowel Disease related CRC (IBD-CRC) is largely unknown. Thus, we aimed to evaluate the prognostic role of PTS in patients with IBD-CRC.All eligible patients with surgically treated, non-metastatic IBD-CRC were retrospectively identified from institutional databases at ten European and Asian academic centers. Long term endpoints included recurrence-free (RFS) and overall survival (OS). Multivariable Cox proportional hazard regression as well as propensity score analyses were performed to evaluate whether PTS was significantly associated with RFS and OS.A total of 213 patients were included in the analysis, of which 32.4% had right-sided (RS) tumors and 67.6% had left-sided (LS) tumors. PTS was not associated with OS and RFS even on univariable analysis (5-year OS for RS vs LS tumors was 68.0% vs 77.3%, respectively, p = 0.31; 5-year RFS for RS vs LS tumors was 62.8% vs 65.4%, respectively, p = 0.51). Similarly, PTS was not associated with OS and RFS on propensity score matched analysis (5-year OS for RS vs LS tumors was 82.9% vs 91.3%, p = 0.79; 5-year RFS for RS vs LS tumors was 85.1% vs 81.5%, p = 0.69). These results were maintained when OS and RFS were calculated in patients with RS vs LS tumors after excluding patients with rectal tumors (5-year OS for RS vs LS tumors was 68.0% vs 77.2%, respectively, p = 0.38; 5-year RFS for RS vs LS tumors was 62.8% vs 59.2%, respectively, p = 0.98).In contrast to sporadic CRC, PTS does not appear to have a prognostic role in IBD-CRC.