Scientific Reports (Jun 2023)

Stage III deficient mismatch repair colon patients get greater benefit from earlier starting oxaliplatin-based chemotherapy regimen

  • Yixiang Zhan,
  • Kemin Ni,
  • Zhaoce Liu,
  • Ran xin,
  • Qiurong Han,
  • Hangyu Ping,
  • Yaohong Liu,
  • Xuanzhu Zhao,
  • Wanting Wang,
  • Suying Yan,
  • Jing Sun,
  • Qinghuai Zhang,
  • Guihua Wang,
  • Zili Zhang,
  • Xipeng Zhang,
  • Xia Hu,
  • Guoxun Li,
  • Chunze Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-33153-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract We evaluate the prognostic value of chemotherapy and other prognostic factors on overall survival among colon patients with deficient mismatch repair (dMMR), and determine the optimum time to start chemotherapy after surgery. Data of 306 colon cancer patients with dMMR who received radical surgery were collected from three Chinese centers between August 2012 and January 2018. Overall survival (OS) was assessed with the Kaplan–Meier method and log-rank. Cox regression analysis were used to assess influencing prognosis factors. The median follow-up time for all patients was 45.0 months (range, 1.0–100). There was a nonsignificant OS benefit from chemotherapy for patients with stage I and stage II disease, including high-risk stage II disease (log-rank p: 0.386, 0.779, 0.921), and a significant OS benefit for patients with stage III and stage IV disease for receiving post-operation chemotherapy (log-rank p = 0.002, 0.019). Stage III patients benefitted from chemotherapy regimens that contained oxaliplatin (log-rank p = 0.004), and Starting chemotherapy with oxaliplatin treatment earlier resulted in better outcomes (95% CI 0.013–0.857; p = 0.035). Chemotherapy regimens containing oxaliplatin can prolong the survival time of stage III and IV dMMR colon cancer patients. This beneficial manifestation was more pronounced after starting chemotherapy treatment early post operation. High risk stage II dMMR colon patients including T4N0M0 cannot benefit from chemotherapy.