Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA.
Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA.
Surgery. 2020 Dec;168(6):1138-1143. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2020.08.025. Epub 2020 Oct 9.
Octogenarians constitute a growing percentage of patients diagnosed with colon malignancies. This study aims to determine if the clinical and pathologic presentation of octogenarians with colon cancer differs from that of patients diagnosed at a younger age.
Data were collected retrospectively for all patients diagnosed with colon cancer who underwent resection at a single institution between January 1, 2004 and December 31, 2017; patients with rectal cancer were excluded. Patients were categorized by age at diagnosis: either 50 to 79 years of age or ≥80 years of age; those <50 years of age were excluded because of the greater risk of a hereditary etiology. The primary outcome was the correlation between patient age and pathologic features of the tumor, including tumor size, lymph node metastases, perineural invasion, and extramural venous invasion.
Of 1,301 patients, 329 (25%) were ≥80. Female patients predominated the octogenarian cohort (61% vs 39%; P < .001). Octogenarians presented with larger tumors when compared to patients age 50 to 79 (5.2 cm vs 4.5 cm; P < .001). More patients ≥80 had tumors which were >8 cm (17.3% vs 8.9%; P < .001). Tumors in younger patients were more often detected on screening colonoscopy (23.1% vs 7.3%; P < .001). Regardless of tumor size, octogenarians were less likely to have positive lymph nodes than younger patients (P = .02). In addition, octogenarians were less likely to exhibit extramural venous invasion compared to younger patients across all tumor sizes (P < .001). Younger patients had greater median overall survival (6.4 years vs 4.4 years; P < .001), yet 3-year disease-free survival was comparable between age groups (P = .12).
Octogenarians with colon cancer present with larger tumors but appear to have less aggressive disease, as reflected in a lower pathologic stage, less extramural venous invasion, and less lymph node metastases, than younger patients with similar size tumors. Three-year disease-free survival is comparable between octogenarians and patients aged 50 to 79.
80 岁以上的患者在被诊断患有结肠癌的患者中所占比例不断增加。本研究旨在确定 80 岁以上患者与较年轻患者的结肠癌临床表现和病理表现是否存在差异。
回顾性收集 2004 年 1 月 1 日至 2017 年 12 月 31 日期间在单一机构接受手术切除的所有结肠癌患者的数据;排除直肠癌患者。根据诊断时的年龄将患者分为两类:50-79 岁或≥80 岁;排除年龄<50 岁的患者,因为这些患者患遗传性病因的风险更高。主要结局是患者年龄与肿瘤病理特征之间的相关性,包括肿瘤大小、淋巴结转移、神经周围侵犯和外膜静脉侵犯。
在 1301 名患者中,329 名(25%)≥80 岁。女性在 80 岁以上的队列中占主导地位(61%比 39%;P<0.001)。与 50-79 岁的患者相比,80 岁以上的患者肿瘤更大(5.2 厘米比 4.5 厘米;P<0.001)。更多的 80 岁以上患者肿瘤>8 厘米(17.3%比 8.9%;P<0.001)。年轻患者中更多的肿瘤是通过筛查性结肠镜检查发现的(23.1%比 7.3%;P<0.001)。无论肿瘤大小如何,80 岁以上的患者淋巴结阳性的可能性均低于年轻患者(P=0.02)。此外,与年轻患者相比,所有肿瘤大小的 80 岁以上患者发生外膜静脉侵犯的可能性较低(P<0.001)。年轻患者的中位总生存期更长(6.4 年比 4.4 年;P<0.001),但两组 3 年无病生存率相当(P=0.12)。
80 岁以上的结肠癌患者肿瘤较大,但与肿瘤大小相似的年轻患者相比,其疾病侵袭性似乎较低,表现为较低的病理分期、较少的外膜静脉侵犯和较少的淋巴结转移。80 岁以上患者与 50-79 岁患者的 3 年无病生存率相当。