JCO Global Oncology (Mar 2024)

Early-Onset Colorectal Cancer in Egypt: Pathological Characters, Patterns of Care, and Survival Compared to Average-Age Onset Colorectal Cancer: A Retrospective Multicenter Study

  • Noha Rashad,
  • Salem Eid Salem,
  • Mohamed A.M. Meheissen,
  • Ghada Refaat,
  • Heba Mahmoud Sami,
  • Abdelsalam Temerik,
  • Nashwa Kordy,
  • Mina A. Daniel,
  • Mohamed El-Kaffas,
  • Mohamed Esam,
  • Hazem El Mansy,
  • Yasser Elkerm,
  • Amr Abdelaziz Elsaid,
  • Abdelsalam Attia Ismail,
  • Mohyeldin Saber Abdelhalim,
  • Lamiaa Moustafa Ahmad,
  • Mai Akram Mahmoud,
  • Eman D. El Desouky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1200/GO.23.00372
Journal volume & issue
no. 10

Abstract

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PURPOSEEarly-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC) is a rising health problem. The incidence of EOCRC has increased over the past 2 decades all over the world. Reports from Egypt since the 1990s have reported a higher incidence among young populations with no identifiable risk factors. The aim of this study was to assess EOCRC in Egypt regarding incidence, characteristics, treatment pattern, and survival compared with average age onset and elderly patients.MATERIALS AND METHODSThis was a retrospective, record-based, cohort study combining data from four different cancer centers in Egypt. We grouped patients according to age into three categories: the EOCRC group for patients age ≤45 years and the average age onset and elderly cancer group (for patients age ≥65 years).RESULTSThe study included 1,310 patients with histopathologically proven colorectal cancer, representing four different geographical areas in Egypt. Patients with EOCRC represented 42.4% of the study population. Female patients were 50.6% among the EOCRC group and 52.5% among the average age group. Rectal tumors were significantly higher in EOCRC (54.7% v 40.6%; P < .001). There was no significant difference between both groups regarding the tumor stage at presentation, obstruction, or presence of metastases at presentation. Patients with EOCRC had a significantly higher rate of peritoneum/adnexa metastases than the average age ones (12.3% in EOCRC v 6.9% in the average age group; P < .001). No statistically significant differences between EOCRC and average age groups in both disease-free survival and overall survival were reported.CONCLUSIONA comprehensive framework for the study of EOCRC is required in Egypt as well as a genomic analysis to identify possible underlying genetic alterations responsible for the high incidence of EOCRC.