Elsevier

Cancer Epidemiology

Volume 39, Issue 5, October 2015, Pages 734-744
Cancer Epidemiology

Metastatic spread pattern after curative colorectal cancer surgery. A retrospective, longitudinal analysis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.canep.2015.07.009Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Risk factors and metastatic spread patterns of recurrent CRC were analyzed.

  • Left sided colon cancer has a 70% increased risk of isolated liver metastases.

  • Rectal cancer has a more than two fold increased risk of local recurrence and isolated lung metastases.

  • Risk adapted colorectal surveillance programs should be further explored.

Abstract

Objective

The most common sites of colorectal cancer (CRC) recurrence are the local tissues, liver or lungs. The objective was to identify risk factors associated with the primary CRC tumor and cancer recurrence in these anatomical sites.

Methods

Retrospective, longitudinal analyses of data on CRC survivors. Multivariable Cox regression analysis was performed to examine the association between possible cofounders with recurrence to various anatomical sites.

Results

Data for 10,398CRC survivors (tumor location right colon = 3870, left colon = 2898, high rectum = 2569, low rectum = 1061) were analyzed; follow up time was up to five years. Mean age at curative surgery was 71.5 (SD 11.8) years, 20.2% received radio-chemotherapy, stage T3 (64.4%) and N0 (65.1%) were most common. Overall 1632 (15.7%) had cancer recurrence (Isolated liver n = 412, 3,8%;  isolated lung n = 252, 2,4%;  isolated local n = 223, 2.1%). Risk factors associated with recurrent CRC were identified, i.e. isolated liver metastases (male: Adjusted Hazard Ratio (AHR) 1,45; colon left: AHR 1,63; N2 disease: AHR 3,35; T2 disease: AHR 2,82), isolated lung metastases (colon left: AHR 1,53; rectum high: AHR 2,48; rectum low: AHR 2,65; N2 disease 3,76), and local recurrence (glands examined < 12: AHR 1,51; CRM <3 mm: AHR 1,60; rectum high: AHR 2,15; N2 disease: AHR 2,58) (all p values <0001).

Conclusion

Our study finds that the site of the primary CRC tumor is associated with location of subsequent metastasis. Left sided colon cancers have increased risk of metastatic spread to the liver, whereas rectal cancers have increased risk of local recurrence and metastatic spread to the lungs. These results, in combination with other risk factors for CRC recurrence, should be taken into consideration when designing risk adapted post-treatment CRC surveillance programs.

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