| Literature DB >> 32544965 |
Stefanie Noepel-Duennebacke1, Hendrik Juette2, Inke Sabine Feder2, Larissa Kluxen2, Nadezda Basara3, Wolfgang Hiller4, Torsten Herzog5, Renate Klaassen-Mielke6, Lothar Mueller7, Metin Senkal8, Lars Engel9, Christian Teschendorf10, Guido Trenn11, Berlinda Verdoodt2, Heiner Wolters12, Waldemar Uhl5, Anke Reinacher-Schick1, Andrea Tannapfel2.
Abstract
Colorectal cancer is one of the leading malignancies and still accounts for almost 25 000 deaths in Germany each year. Although there is accumulating data on the molecular basis, treatment and clinical outcome of patients within clinical trials evidence from the real-world setting is mostly lacking. We started the molecular registry trial Colopredict Plus in 2013 to collect clinical and molecular data from a real-world cohort of patients with early colon cancer stage II and III in 70 German colon cancer centers focusing on the prognostic impact of high microsatellite instability. In this interim report, we characterize a clinical cohort of 2615 patients, of whom 1787 tissue probes were analyzed. Microsatellite status was assessed using immunhistochemistry and fragment length analysis, with a concordance of 91.4 %. These established histopathological methods are sensitive and cost-effective. The median age was 72 years, significantly higher compared to clinical trial populations, with a median Charlson Comorbidity Index of 3. The stage-dependent incidence of microsatellite instability was 23.7 % and was associated with female gender, BRAF-mutation, UICC stage II and localization in the right colon. Survival calculated in disease free, relapse free and overall survival significantly differed between MSI-H and MSS, in favor of MSI-H patients. Multivariate age-adjusted analyses of relapse-free survival, disease-free survival, and overall survival highlighted microsatellite instability as a robust and positive prognostic marker for early colon cancer independent of age. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32544965 DOI: 10.1055/a-1156-4433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Z Gastroenterol ISSN: 0044-2771 Impact factor: 2.000