Purpose To compare characteristics of patients, the risk of recurrence, and mortality among adult patients with primary resectable gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) receiving short-term (6-12 months) versus long-term (≥24 months) imatinib therapy. Methods Detailed information on primary resectable KITpositive GIST patients initiated on imatinib adjuvant therapy was retrospectively collected for short- and long-term imatinib patients from 318 US oncologists using an online data collection form. Patient characteristics were compared using Wilcoxon and Chi-square tests. Disease recurrence and mortality rates were compared using multivariate Cox proportional hazard models. Results Among the 406 short-term and 406 long-term imatinib patients, the median follow-up was 916 and 970 days, respectively. While patients generally had similar demographic characteristics, the short-term group had a higher prevalence of cardiovascular and ischemic heart diseases and patients in the long-term group had a higher presurgery risk profile. This finding was consistent with the main reason reported by oncologists for prescribing adjuvant imatinib over longer duration, i.e., patient risk profile. Disease recurrence [5.9 versus 1.2 %, (p
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Conley, A. P., Guérin, A., Sasane, M., Gauthier, G., Schwiep, F., Hunt Keir, C., & Wu, E. Q. (2013). Comparison of the long-term risk of recurrence and other clinical outcomes in gist patients receiving imatinib as adjuvant therapy-a retrospective chart extract-based approach. Journal of Gastrointestinal Cancer, 44(2), 190–198. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12029-012-9467-1
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