| Literature DB >> 28349281 |
Toshiaki Watanabe1, Kei Muro2, Yoichi Ajioka3, Yojiro Hashiguchi4, Yoshinori Ito5, Yutaka Saito6, Tetsuya Hamaguchi7, Hideyuki Ishida8, Megumi Ishiguro9, Soichiro Ishihara10, Yukihide Kanemitsu11, Hiroshi Kawano12, Yusuke Kinugasa13, Norihiro Kokudo14, Keiko Murofushi15, Takako Nakajima16, Shiro Oka17, Yoshiharu Sakai18, Akihito Tsuji19, Keisuke Uehara20, Hideki Ueno21, Kentaro Yamazaki22, Masahiro Yoshida23, Takayuki Yoshino24, Narikazu Boku7, Takahiro Fujimori25, Michio Itabashi26, Nobuo Koinuma27, Takayuki Morita28, Genichi Nishimura29, Yuh Sakata30, Yasuhiro Shimada31, Keiichi Takahashi32, Shinji Tanaka33, Osamu Tsuruta34, Toshiharu Yamaguchi35, Naohiko Yamaguchi36, Toshiaki Tanaka10, Kenjiro Kotake37, Kenichi Sugihara9,38.
Abstract
Japanese mortality due to colorectal cancer is on the rise, surpassing 49,000 in 2015. Many new treatment methods have been developed during recent decades. The Japanese Society for Cancer of the Colon and Rectum Guidelines 2016 for the treatment of colorectal cancer (JSCCR Guidelines 2016) were prepared to show standard treatment strategies for colorectal cancer, to eliminate disparities among institutions in terms of treatment, to eliminate unnecessary treatment and insufficient treatment, and to deepen mutual understanding between health-care professionals and patients by making these Guidelines available to the general public. These Guidelines were prepared by consensus reached by the JSCCR Guideline Committee, based on a careful review of the evidence retrieved by literature searches, and in view of the medical health insurance system and actual clinical practice settings in Japan. Therefore, these Guidelines can be used as a tool for treating colorectal cancer in actual clinical practice settings. More specifically, they can be used as a guide to obtaining informed consent from patients and choosing the method of treatment for each patient. As a result of the discussions held by the Guideline Committee, controversial issues were selected as Clinical Questions, and recommendations were made. Each recommendation is accompanied by a classification of the evidence and a classification of recommendation categories based on the consensus reached by the Guideline Committee members. Here we present the English version of the JSCCR Guidelines 2016.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Colorectal cancer; Endoscopy; Guideline; Radiotherapy; Surgery
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28349281 PMCID: PMC5809573 DOI: 10.1007/s10147-017-1101-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Oncol ISSN: 1341-9625 Impact factor: 3.402
Rating the quality of evidence
| Step 1 (evaluation of individual study): study design, evaluation of bias risk, create structured abstract |
| Step 2 (overall rating for each important outcome across studies) |
| 1. Initial quality of a body of evidence: evaluation of each study design group |
| systematic reviews, meta-analysis, randomized controlled trials = “initial quality A (high level)” |
| observation studies, cohort studies, case control studies = “initial quality C (low level)” |
| case series, case reports = “initial quality D (very low level)” |
| 2. Five reasons to possibility rate down the quality |
| risk of bias |
| inconsistency in results |
| indirectness of evidence |
| data imprecision |
| high possibility of publication bias |
| 3. Three reasons to possibility rate up the quality |
| large effect with no confounding factors |
| dose–response gradient |
| possible confounding factors are weaker than actual effects |
| 4. We evaluate 1 → 2 → 3, and assess the quality of a body of evidence |
Definition of levels of evidence (Reference [13])
| A (high) | We are very confident in the effect estimate |
| B (moderate) | We are moderately confident in the effect estimate: the true effect is likely to be close to the estimate of the effect, but there is a possibility that it is substantially different |
| C (low) | Our confidence in the effect estimate is limited: the true effect may be substantially different from the estimate of the effect |
| D (very low) | We have very little confidence in the effect estimate: the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate of effect |
Strength of recommendation (Reference [24])
| Strength of recommendation | |
| 1 (Strong recommendation) | Strong “For” an intervention |
| Strong “Against” an intervention | |
| 2 (Weak recommendation) | Weak “For” an intervention |
| Weak “Against” an intervention | |
Number of scientific articles retrieved and selected
| Number of articles retrieved | Number of articles selected | Number of articles retrieved manually | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PubMed | Ichushi | PubMed | Ichushi | ||
| (1) Endoscopic treatment of colorectal cancer | 811 | 385 | 80 | 40 | 39 |
| (2) Treatment of Stage 0 to Stage III colorectal cancer | 469 | 285 | 92 | 14 | 12 |
| (3) Treatment of Stage IV colorectal cancer | 237 | 102 | 97 | 14 | 13 |
| (4) Treatment of liver metastases of colorectal cancer | 812 | 357 | 364 | 79 | 25 |
| (5) Treatment of lung metastases of colorectal cancer | 96 | 157 | 46 | 35 | 6 |
| (6) Treatment of recurrent colorectal cancer | 688 | 302 | 147 | 29 | 13 |
| (7) Adjuvant chemotherapy for colorectal cancer | 855 | 450 | 244 | 39 | 47 |
| (8) Chemotherapy for advanced or recurrent colorectal cancer | 1062 | 451 | 320 | 53 | 157 |
| (9) Adjuvant radiotherapy for colorectal cancer | 447 | 95 | 115 | 8 | 27 |
| (10) Palliative radiotherapy for colorectal cancer | 708 | 39 | 109 | 6 | 29 |
| (11) Palliative care for colorectal cancer | 278 | 181 | 58 | 18 | 10 |
| (12) Surveillance after surgery for colorectal cancer | 1446 | 1287 | 256 | 57 | 20 |
| Total | 7909 | 4091 | 1928 | 392 | 398 |
Fig. 1Treatment strategies for cTis (M) cancer and cT1 (SM) cancer
Fig. 2Surgical treatment strategies for cStage 0 to cStage III colorectal cancer
Lateral dissection and lateral metastasis of rectal cancer
| No. of patients | No. of patients who underwent lateral dissection | Lateral dissection rate | No. of patients with lateral metastasis | Lateral metastasis rate (percentage of all patients) | Lateral metastasis rate (percentage of patients who underwent lateral dissection) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RS | ||||||
| sm | 124 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| mp | 127 | 6 | 4.7% | 0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| ss/a1 | 316 | 24 | 7.5% | 0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| se/a2 | 177 | 8 | 4.5% | 0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| si/ai | 32 | 14 | 43.8% | 1 | 3.1 | 7.1 |
| Total | 776 | 52 | 6.7% | 1 | 0.1 | 1.9 |
| Ra | ||||||
| sm | 138 | 5 | 3.6% | 0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| mp | 149 | 18 | 12.1% | 0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| ss/a1 | 230 | 58 | 25.2% | 4 | 1.7 | 6.9 |
| se/a2 | 181 | 59 | 32.6% | 7 | 3.9 | 11.9 |
| si/ai | 15 | 8 | 53.3% | 0 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| Total | 713 | 148 | 20.8% | 11 | 1.5 | 7.4 |
| RaRb + Rb | ||||||
| sm | 234 | 37 | 15.8% | 2 | 0.9 | 5.4 |
| mp | 372 | 218 | 58.6% | 20 | 5.4 | 9.2 |
| ss/a1 | 350 | 230 | 65.7% | 28 | 7.7 | 12.2 |
| se/a2 | 412 | 319 | 77.4% | 75 | 18.0 | 23.5 |
| si/ai | 59 | 48 | 81.4% | 17 | 28.8 | 35.4 |
| Total | 1427 | 852 | 59.7% | 142 | 9.8 | 16.7 |
Project study by the JSCCR: patients in years 1991–1998
Incidences of lymph node metastasis according to primary site and depth of tumor invasion
| No. of patients | Extent of lymph node metastasis detected histologically | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||
| All sites | ||||||
| sm | 3151 | 90.7 | 7.3 | 1.9 | 0.0 | 0.1 |
| mp | 3590 | 77.3 | 17.4 | 4.2 | 0.9 | 0.3 |
| ss/a1 | 11,272 | 54.6 | 29.9 | 12.0 | 2.3 | 1.2 |
| se/a2 | 6101 | 35.9 | 34.4 | 20.2 | 5.7 | 3.8 |
| si/ai | 1502 | 43.0 | 27.6 | 16.4 | 6.7 | 6.3 |
| Total | 25,617 | 57.1 | 26.3 | 11.9 | 2.9 | 1.9 |
| Colon | ||||||
| sm | 1957 | 91.4 | 6.8 | 1.8 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| mp | 1747 | 79.3 | 16.3 | 3.5 | 0.6 | 0.3 |
| ss/a1 | 7333 | 56.6 | 28.1 | 11.7 | 2.4 | 1.2 |
| se/a2 | 3363 | 37.4 | 34.0 | 19.3 | 5.6 | 3.7 |
| si/ai | 960 | 44.6 | 28.6 | 14.7 | 5.5 | 6.6 |
| Total | 15,360 | 58.6 | 25.4 | 11.3 | 2.8 | 1.8 |
| Rectosigmoid | ||||||
| sm | 337 | 88.7 | 9.5 | 1.8 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| mp | 429 | 80.4 | 17.0 | 2.6 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| ss/a1 | 1584 | 53.9 | 33.0 | 10.2 | 1.3 | 1.7 |
| se/a2 | 789 | 34.2 | 38.4 | 20.8 | 3.2 | 3.4 |
| si/ai | 187 | 44.9 | 24.6 | 19.3 | 4.8 | 6.4 |
| Total | 3326 | 55.7 | 29.3 | 11.4 | 1.6 | 2.0 |
| Rectum | ||||||
| sm | 839 | 89.7 | 7.7 | 2.0 | 0.1 | 0.4 |
| mp | 1373 | 73.9 | 19.2 | 5.4 | 1.4 | 0.1 |
| ss/a1 | 2310 | 48.8 | 33.3 | 14.2 | 2.7 | 1.0 |
| se/a2 | 1904 | 33.9 | 33.6 | 21.5 | 6.8 | 4.1 |
| si/ai | 328 | 38.1 | 26.2 | 19.8 | 10.4 | 5.5 |
| Total | 6754 | 54.3 | 27.0 | 13.3 | 3.6 | 1.8 |
| Anal canal | ||||||
| sm | 18 | 94.4 | 0.0 | 5.6 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| mp | 41 | 70.7 | 9.8 | 7.3 | 7.3 | 4.9 |
| ss/a1 | 45 | 60.0 | 22.2 | 8.9 | 6.7 | 2.2 |
| se/a2 | 46 | 32.6 | 21.7 | 23.9 | 15.2 | 6.5 |
| si/ai | 27 | 33.3 | 25.9 | 14.8 | 18.5 | 7.4 |
| Total | 177 | 54.8 | 17.5 | 13.0 | 10.2 | 4.5 |
National registry of patients with cancer of the colon and rectum of the JSCCR: patients in years 2000–2004. Depth of invasion and the degree of lymph node metastasis were determined according to the rules set forth in the “Japanese Classification of Colorectal Carcinoma” (6th edition)
Curative resection rate according to stage (lower rows: no. of patients)
| Stage | I | II | IIIa | IIIb | IV | All Stages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All patients | 98.7% | 96.2% | 91.9% | 81.8% | – | 78.0% |
| 5455 | 7336 | 5635 | 2572 | 4300 | 25,298 | |
| Colon | 99.1% | 96.6% | 92.4% | 83.6% | – | 77.2% |
| 3028 | 4688 | 3208 | 1379 | 2787 | 15,090 | |
| Rectosigmoid | 99.5% | 96.6% | 92.5% | 80.2% | – | 78.0% |
| 615 | 961 | 835 | 288 | 560 | 3259 | |
| Rectum | 97.9% | 95.0% | 90.9% | 80.5% | – | 79.9% |
| 1764 | 1644 | 1564 | 866 | 929 | 6767 | |
| Anal canal | 95.8% | 86.0% | 78.6% | 61.5% | – | 70.9% |
| 48 | 43 | 28 | 39 | 24 | 182 |
National registry of patients with cancer of the colon and rectum of the JSCCR: patients in years 2000–2004
Curative resection rate = Number of patients with histological curability A cancer/Total number of patients who underwent surgery
Staging was performed according to the rules set forth in the “Japanese Classification of Colorectal Carcinoma” (6th edition)
Cumulative 5-year survival rate according to site (lower rows: no. of patients)
| Stage | 0 | I | II | IIIa | IIIb | IV | All Stages |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cecum | 91.0% | 93.7% | 83.5% | 73.0% | 65.4% | 12.5% | 68.2% |
| 79 | 185 | 249 | 207 | 113 | 204 | 1037 | |
| Ascending colon | 93.9% | 91.2% | 85.8% | 79.1% | 63.4% | 19.1% | 71.4% |
| 125 | 338 | 656 | 416 | 211 | 410 | 2156 | |
| Transverse colon | 88.9% | 91.4% | 85.2% | 78.5% | 65.7% | 20.8% | 74.0% |
| 105 | 277 | 428 | 244 | 138 | 210 | 1402 | |
| Descending colon | 100.0% | 94.1% | 85.3% | 82.0% | 52.9% | 21.1% | 75.4% |
| 43 | 146 | 224 | 166 | 52 | 117 | 748 | |
| Sigmoid colon | 94.2% | 92.3% | 85.8% | 83.0% | 64.7% | 22.0% | 73.7% |
| 154 | 852 | 1124 | 837 | 363 | 736 | 4066 | |
| Rectosigmoid | 89.4% | 91.5% | 84.8% | 78.0% | 60.0% | 19.8% | 71.6% |
| 54 | 366 | 539 | 473 | 175 | 322 | 1929 | |
| Upper rectum | 98.0% | 95.3% | 84.6% | 75.9% | 57.7% | 11.6% | 72.4% |
| 67 | 356 | 464 | 471 | 173 | 263 | 1794 | |
| Lower rectum | 97.5% | 88.3% | 81.7% | 70.0% | 51.4% | 11.6% | 70.5% |
| 142 | 718 | 486 | 473 | 332 | 298 | 2449 | |
| Anal canal | 100.0% | 78.7% | 90.9% | 46.9% | 61.2% | 15.7% | 60.0% |
| 4 | 16 | 14 | 16 | 19 | 17 | 86 | |
| Colon | 93.0% | 92.3% | 85.4% | 80.4% | 63.8% | 19.9% | 72.8% |
| 506 | 1798 | 2681 | 1870 | 877 | 1677 | 9409 | |
| Rectum | 97.6% | 90.6% | 83.1% | 73.0% | 53.5% | 14.8% | 71.3% |
| 209 | 1074 | 950 | 944 | 505 | 561 | 4243 | |
| All sites | 94.0% | 91.6% | 84.8% | 77.7% | 60.0% | 18.8% | 72.1% |
| 773 | 3254 | 4184 | 3303 | 1576 | 2577 | 15,667 |
National registry of patients with cancer of the colon and rectum of the JSCCR: patients in years 2000–2004
Only adenocarcinomas (including mucinous carcinomas and signet-ring cell carcinomas) were counted
Survival rates were calculated by the life table method with death from any cause as an event
5-year censoring rate = 20.5% (3208/15,667)
Staging was performed according to the rules set forth in the “Japanese Classification of Colorectal Carcinoma” (6th edition)
Fig. 3Treatment strategies for Stage IV colorectal cancer
Incidence of synchronous distant metastasis of colorectal cancer
| Liver | Lung | Peritoneum | Other sites | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bone | Brain | Virchow | Other | Total | ||||
| Colon cancer | 11.8% | 2.2% | 5.7% | 0.3% | 0.0% | 0.1% | 1.3% | 1.8% |
| No. of patients 15,391 | 1815 | 338 | 875 | 47 | 6 | 23 | 205 | 281 |
| Rectal cancer | 9.5% | 2.7% | 2.6% | 0.5% | 0.0% | 0.1% | 1.1% | 1.7% |
| No. of patients 10,221 | 970 | 273 | 266 | 49 | 5 | 6 | 112 | 172 |
| Total no. of patients | 10.9% | 2.4% | 4.5% | 0.4% | 0.0% | 0.1% | 1.2% | 1.8% |
| 2785 | 611 | 1141 | 96 | 11 | 29 | 317 | 453 | |
National registry of patients with cancer of the colon and rectum of the JSCCR: patients in years 2000–2004
Fig. 4Treatment strategies for recurrent colorectal cancer
Fig. 5Treatment strategies for hematogenous metastases
Fig. 6Chemotherapy for unresectable colorectal cancer
Fig. 7An example of a surveillance schedule after curative resection of pStage I to pStage III colorectal cancer
Fig. 8Graph of the cumulative incidence of recurrence according to stage (project study by the JSCCR: patients in years 1991–1996)
Fig. 9Graph of the cumulative incidence of recurrence according to the site of recurrence (project study by the JSCCR: patients in years 1991–1996)
Recurrence rate after curative resection of colorectal cancer according to stage and cumulative incidence of recurrence according to the number of years after surgery
| Stage (no. of patients) | Recurrence rate (no. of patients with recurrence) | Cumulative incidence of recurrence according to the no. of years after surgery (cumulative no. of patients with recurrence) | Percentage of patients experiencing recurrence more than 5 years after surgery among all patients (no. of patients) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 years | 4 years | 5 years | |||
| I | 3.7% | 68.6% | 82.4% | 96.1% | 0.15% |
| (1367) | (51) | (35) | (42) | (49) | (2) |
| II | 13.3% | 76.9% | 88.2% | 92.9% | 0.94% |
| (1912) | (255) | (196) | (225) | (237) | (18) |
| III | 30.8% | 87.0% | 93.8% | 97.8% | 0.67% |
| (1957) | (600) | (522) | (563) | (587) | (13) |
| All | 17.3% | 83.2% | 91.6% | 96.4% | 0.63% |
| (5230) | (906) | (753) | (830) | (873) | (33) |
Project study of the JSCCR: patients in years 1991–1996
Recurrence rate of Stage I colorectal cancer (RS cancer was counted as colon cancer)
| Stage I | No. of patients | No. of patients with recurrence | Recurrence rate (%) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor location | ||||
| Colon | 891 | 24 | 2.7 | 0.0056 |
| Rectum | 476 | 27 | 5.7 | |
| Depth of tumor invasion | ||||
| SM | 714 | 9 | 1.3 | <0.0001 |
| MP | 653 | 42 | 6.4 | |
| Tumor location and depth of tumor invasion | ||||
| Colon | ||||
| SM | 528 | 7 | 1.3 | 0.0024 |
| MP | 363 | 17 | 4.7 | |
| Rectum | ||||
| SM | 186 | 2 | 1.1 | 0.0005 |
| MP | 290 | 25 | 8.6 | |
Project study of the JSCCR: patients in years 1991–1996
Recurrence rate according to the site of the first recurrence after curative resection of colorectal cancer and cumulative incidence of recurrence according to the number of years after surgery
| Site of first recurrence | Recurrence rate (no. of patients with recurrence (including overlaps) | Cumulative incidence of recurrence according to the number of years after surgery (cumulative no. of patients with recurrence) | Percentage of patients experiencing recurrence more than 5 years after surgery among all patients (no. of patients) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 years | 4 years | 5 years | |||
| Liver | 7.1% (373) | 87.9% (328) | 94.1% (351) | 98.7% (368) | 0.10% (5) |
| Lung | 4.8% (250) | 78.0% (195) | 88.8% (222) | 94.8% (237) | 0.25% (13) |
| Local | 4.0% (209) | 80.9% (169) | 90.4% (189) | 96.2% (201) | 0.15% (8) |
| Anastomotic | 0.4% (22) | 95.5% (21) | 95.5% (21) | 95.5% (21) | 0.02% (1) |
| Other | 3.8% (199) | 79.4% (158) | 91.0% (181) | 95.5% (190) | 0.17% (9) |
| All (5230) | 17.3% (906) | ||||
Project study of the JSCCR: patients in years 1991–1996
Comparison between the recurrence rates of colon cancer and rectal cancer according to the site of the first recurrence (RS cancer was counted as colon cancer)
| Site of recurrence | Colon cancer (3583 patients) | Rectal cancer (1647 patients) |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Liver | 7.0% (252) | 7.3% (121) | NS |
| Lung | 3.5% (126) | 7.5% (124) | <0.0001 |
| Local | 1.8% (64) | 8.8% (145) | 0.0001 |
| Anastomotic | 0.3% (9) | 0.8% (13) | 0.0052 |
| Other | 3.6% (130) | 4.2% (69) | NS |
| All | 14.1% (506) | 24.3% (400) | <0.0001 |
Project study of the JSCCR: patients in years 1991–1996
Fig. 10Treatment strategies for pT1 (SM) cancer after endoscopic resection
Fig. 11Method for measuring depth of SM invasion. a When it is possible to identify or estimate the location of the muscularis mucosae, depth of SM invasion is measured from the lower border of the muscularis mucosae. b, c When it is not possible to identify or estimate the location of the muscularis mucosae, depth of SM invasion is measured from the surface layer of the muscularis mucosae. Sessile lesion (b), Pedunculated lesion (c). d For pedunculated lesions with tangled a muscularis mucosae, depth of SM invasion is measured as the distance between the point of deepest invasion and the reference line, which is defined as the boundary between the tumor head and the stalk. e Invasion by pedunculated lesions that is limited to within the head is defined as “head invasion”
Fig. 12Venous invasion (arrow in A). A Located in the vicinity of an artery (a). B Elastic fibers in the vein wall have become clear by Victoria blue staining
Fig. 13Lymphatic invasion (arrow in a). a A cancer cell nest is visible in the interstitial space. b Double staining for cytokeratin and D2-40. Cancer cells are stained brown, and the lymphatic endothelium is stained purplish red
Fig. 14Space formed by artifacts during preparation of the specimen (arrow in a). a A cancer cell nest is visible in the interstitial space. b Double staining for cytokeratin and D2-40. The interstitial space is D2-40-negative
Fig. 15Budding (arrow in b). A cancer cell nest consisting of one or fewer than five cells that has infiltrated the interstitium at the invasive margin of the cancer is seen. b is the square area in a
Depth of invasion of sm cancer and lymph node metastasis (modified from Reference 201)
| sm invasion distance (μm) | Pedunculated | Non-pedunculated | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of lesions |
| Number of lesions |
| |
| head invasion | 53 | 3 (5.7) | ||
| 0 < | 10 | 0 (0) | 65 | 0 (0) |
| 500 ≤ | 7 | 0 (0) | 58 | 0 (0) |
| 1000 ≤ | 11 | 1 (9.1) | 52 | 6 (11.5) |
| 1500 ≤ | 7 | 1 (14.3) | 82 | 10 (12.2) |
| 2000 ≤ | 10 | 1 (10.0) | 84 | 13 (15.5) |
| 2500 ≤ | 4 | 0 (0) | 71 | 8 (11.3) |
| 3000 ≤ | 9 | 2 (22.2) | 72 | 5 (6.9) |
| 3500 ≤ | 30 | 2 (6.7) | 240 | 35 (14.6) |
The lymph node metastasis rate of patients with a depth of invasion of 1000 μm or above was 12.5%
All three lymph node metastasis-positive patients with head invasion were ly positive