Cancer Medicine (Nov 2023)

Prediction of liver and lung metastases in patients with early‐onset colorectal cancer by nomograms based on heterogeneous and homogenous risk factors

  • Yimin E,
  • Sizheng Sun,
  • Xiaoyu Fan,
  • Chen Lu,
  • Pengcheng Ji,
  • Yicheng Huang,
  • Jing Sun,
  • Xiaojun Yang,
  • Chunzhao Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.6633
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 22
pp. 20712 – 20726

Abstract

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Abstract Background Identifying the risk factors for distant metastasis in early‐onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC) is crucial for elucidating its etiology and facilitating preventive treatment. This study aims to characterize the variability in EOCRC incidence and discern both heterogeneous and homogeneous risk factors associated with synchronous liver, lung, and hepato‐lung metastases. Methods This study included patients with EOCRC enrolled in the SEER database between 2010 and 2015 and divided patients into three groups by synchronous liver, lung, and hepato‐lung metastases. Each group of patients with different metastasis types was randomly assigned to the development and validation cohort in a ratio of 7:3. Logistic regression was used to analyze the heterogeneous and homogenous risk factors for synchronous liver, lung, and hepato‐lung metastases in the development cohort of patients. Nomograms were built to calculate the risk of metastasis, and the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve and calibration curve were used to quantitatively evaluate their performance. Results A total of 16,336 eligible patients with EOCRC were included in this study, of which 17.90% (2924/16,336) had distant metastases. The overall incidences of synchronous liver, lung, and hepato‐lung metastases were 11.90% (1921/16,146), 2.42% (390/16,126), and 1.50% (241/16,108), respectively. Positive CEA values before treatment, increased lymphatic metastases, and deeper invasion of intestinal wall were positively correlated with three distant types of metastases. On the contrary, the correlation of age, ethnicity, location of primary tumor, and histologic grade among the three types was inconsistent. The ROC curve and calibration curve proved to have fine performance in predicting distant metastases of EOCRC. Conclusions There are significant differences in the incidence of distant metastases in EOCRC, and related risk factors are heterogeneous and homogenous. Although limited risk factors were incorporated in this study, the established nomograms indicated good predictive performance.

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