A new simple morphology-based risk score is prognostic in stage I/II colon cancers

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Abstract

A portion of stage I/II colon cancers (10–20%) exhibit an adverse clinical course. The administration of adjuvant chemotherapy is recommended only in certain high-risk situations. However, these risk factors recently failed to predict benefit from adjuvant therapy. We composed a new morphology-based risk score that includes pT1/2 versus 3/4 stage, vascular or lymphovascular invasion, invasion type according to Jass, tumor budding and paucity (less than two) of lymph nodes larger than 5 mm. The occurrence of each of these factors accounts for one point in the score (Range 0–5). This score was evaluated in a retrospective study that included 301 cases. The overall survival differed significantly between the three groups with median survival times of 103, 90, and 48 months, respectively. Multivariable analysis revealed morphology-based risk—high risk and low risk—as the sole independent factors for the prediction of death. Morphology-based risk scoring was superior to microsatellite status and NCCN risk stratification. This method identifies a group of patients that comprises 18% of the stage II cases with an adverse clinical course. Further studies are necessary to confirm its prognostic value and the possible therapeutic consequences.

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Märkl, B., Märkl, M., Schaller, T., Mayr, P., Schenkirsch, G., Kriening, B., & Anthuber, M. (2016). A new simple morphology-based risk score is prognostic in stage I/II colon cancers. Cancer Medicine, 5(7), 1492–1501. https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.737

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