4.3 Article

The clinical impacts of postoperative complications after colon cancer surgery for the clinical course of adjuvant treatment and survival

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 777-784

Publisher

SPRINGER JAPAN KK
DOI: 10.1007/s10147-023-02332-y

Keywords

Colon cancer; Surgical complication; Adjuvant treatment; Survival

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This study investigated the impact of postoperative complications (POCs) on survival and the potential influence on adjuvant chemotherapy. The results showed that POCs were associated with poor prognosis but did not affect the intensity of adjuvant chemotherapy.
AimWe investigated whether or not postoperative complications (POCs) themselves have a negative survival impact or indirectly worsen the survival due to insufficient adjuvant chemotherapy in a pooled analysis of two large phase III studies performed in JapanPatients and methodsThe study examined the patients who enrolled in 1304, phase III study comparing the efficacy of 6 and 12 months of capecitabine as adjuvant chemotherapy for stage III colon cancer patients and in 882, a phase III study to confirm the tolerability of oxaliplatin, fluorouracil, and l-leucovorin in Japanese stage II/III colon cancer patients. In our study, POCs were defined as the following major surgical complications: anastomotic leakage, pneumonia, bowel obstruction/ileus, surgical site infection, postoperative bleeding, urinary tract infection, and fistula. Patients were classified as those with POCs (C group) and those without POCs (NC group).ResultsA total of 2095 patients were examined in the present study. POCs were observed in 169 patients (8.1%). The overall survival (OS) rates at 5 years after surgery were 75.3% in the C group and 86.5% in the NC group (p = 0.0017). The hazard ratio of POCs for the OS in multivariate analysis was 1.70 (95% confidence interval, 1.19 to 2.45; p = 0.0040). The time to adjuvant treatment failure (TTF) of adjuvant chemotherapy was similar between the groups, being 68.6% in the C group and 67.1% in the NC group for the 6-month continuation rate of adjuvant chemotherapy. The dose reduction rate of adjuvant chemotherapy and adjuvant treatment suspension rate were also similar between the groups (C vs. NC groups: 45.0% vs. 48.7%, p = 0.3520; and 52.7% vs. 55.0%, p = 0.5522, respectively).ConclusionPOCs were associated with a poor prognosis but did not affect the intensity of adjuvant chemotherapy. These results suggested that POCs themselves negatively influence the survival.

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