Background: The intra-tumor stroma percentage in colon cancer (CC) patients has previously been reported by our group as a strong independent prognostic parameter. Patients with a high stroma percentage within the primary tumor have a poor prognosis. Patients and methods: Tissue samples from the most invasive part of the primary tumor of 710 patients (52% Stage II, 48% Stage III) participating in the VICTOR trial were analyzed for their tumor-stroma percentage. Stroma-high (>50%) and stroma-low (≤50%) groups were evaluated with respect to survival times. Results: Overall and disease-free survival times (OS and DFS) were significantly lower in the stroma-high group (OS 0 < P.0001, hazard ratio (HR) = 1.96; DFS P < 0.0001, HR = 2.15). The 5-year OS was 69.0% versus 83.4% and DFS 58.6% versus 77.3% for stroma-high versus stroma-low patients. Conclusion: This study confirms the intra-tumor stroma ratio as a prognostic factor. This parameter could be a valuable and low cost addition to the TNM status and next to current high-risk parameters such as microsatellite instability status used in routine pathology reporting. When adding the stroma-parameter to the ASCO criteria, the rate of 'undertreated' patients dropped from 5.9% to 4.3%, the 'overtreated' increased with 6.8% but the correctly classified increased with an additional 14%. © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society for Medical Oncology. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Huijbers, A., Tollenaar, R. A. E. M., Pelt, G. W. V., Zeestraten, E. C. M., Dutton, S., McConkey, C. C., … Mesker, W. E. (2013). The proportion of tumor-stroma as a strong prognosticator for stage II and III colon cancer patients: Validation in the victor trial. Annals of Oncology, 24(1), 179–185. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mds246
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