Prognostic Factors of Long-Term Outcomes after Primary Chemo-Radiotherapy in Non-Metastatic Anal Squamous Cell Carcinoma: An International Bicentric Cohort
Soledad Iseas,
Diego Prost,
Sarah Bouchereau,
Mariano Golubicki,
Juan Robbio,
Ana Oviedo,
Mariana Coraglio,
Mirta Kujaruk,
Guillermo Méndez,
Marcela Carballido,
Enrique Roca,
Louis Gros,
Vincent De Parades,
Nabil Baba-Hamed,
Julien Adam,
Martín Carlos Abba,
Eric Raymond
Affiliations
Soledad Iseas
Oncology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Diego Prost
Medical Oncology Department, Paris-St Joseph Hospital, 185 Rue Raymond Losserand, 75014 Paris, France
Sarah Bouchereau
Medical Oncology Department, Paris-St Joseph Hospital, 185 Rue Raymond Losserand, 75014 Paris, France
Mariano Golubicki
Oncology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Juan Robbio
Oncology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Ana Oviedo
Oncology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Mariana Coraglio
Proctology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Mirta Kujaruk
Pathology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Guillermo Méndez
Oncology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Marcela Carballido
Oncology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Enrique Roca
Oncology Unit, Gastroenterology Hospital “Dr. Carlos Bonorino Udaondo”, Av. Caseros 2061, Buenos Aires C1264, Argentina
Louis Gros
Medical Oncology Department, Paris-St Joseph Hospital, 185 Rue Raymond Losserand, 75014 Paris, France
Vincent De Parades
Proctology Unit, Paris-St Joseph Hospital, 185 Rue Raymond Losserand, 75014 Paris, France
Nabil Baba-Hamed
Medical Oncology Department, Paris-St Joseph Hospital, 185 Rue Raymond Losserand, 75014 Paris, France
Julien Adam
Pathology Unit, Paris-St Joseph Hospital, 185 Rue Raymond Losserand, 75014 Paris, France
Martín Carlos Abba
Basic and Applied Immunological Research Center (CINIBA), School of Medical Sciences, National University of La Plata, Calle 60 y 120, La Plata C1900, Argentina
Eric Raymond
Medical Oncology Department, Paris-St Joseph Hospital, 185 Rue Raymond Losserand, 75014 Paris, France
Anal squamous cell carcinoma (ASCC) is a rare malignancy with a rising incidence associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. The locally advanced disease is associated with a 30% rate of treatment failure after standard chemoradiotherapy (CRT). We aimed to elucidate the prognostic factors for ASCC after curative CRT. A retrospective multicenter study of 176 consecutive patients with ASCC having completed CRT treated between 2010 and 2017 at two centers was performed. Complete response (CR), disease-free survival (DFS), and overall survival (OS) were analyzed by Kaplan–Meier estimates with log-rank tests. The hierarchical clustering on principal components (HCPC) method was employed in an unsupervised and multivariate approach. The CR rate was 70% and was predictive of DFS (p p p = 0.0002), N0 (p = 0.035), HIV-positive (p = 0.047), HIV-HPV coinfection (p = 0.018), and well-differentiated tumors (p = 0.037). The three-year OS was 81.6%. Female sex (p = 0.05), cT1-T2 (p = 0.02) and well-differentiated tumors (p = 0.003) were associated with better OS. The unsupervised analysis demonstrated a clear segregation of patients in three clusters, identifying that poor prognosis clusters associated with shorter DFS (HR = 1.74 95% CI = 1.25–2.42, p = 0.0008) were enriched with the locally advanced disease, anal canal location, HIV-HPV coinfection, and non-CR. In conclusion, our results reinforce the prognostic value of T stage, N stage, sex, differentiation status, tumor location, and HIV-HPV coinfection in ASCC after CRT.