Cancers (Dec 2022)

Different Oncologic Outcomes in Early-Onset and Late-Onset Sporadic Colorectal Cancer: A Regression Analysis on 2073 Patients

  • Caterina Foppa,
  • Annalisa Maroli,
  • Sara Lauricella,
  • Antonio Luberto,
  • Carlotta La Raja,
  • Francesca Bunino,
  • Michele Carvello,
  • Matteo Sacchi,
  • Francesca De Lucia,
  • Giuseppe Clerico,
  • Marco Montorsi,
  • Antonino Spinelli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14246239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 24
p. 6239

Abstract

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The incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) is increasing in the population aged ≤ 49 (early-onset CRC-EOCRC). Recent studies highlighted the biological and clinical differences between EOCRC and late-onset CRC (LOCRC-age ≥ 50), while comparative results about long-term survival are still debated. This study aimed to investigate whether age of onset may impact on oncologic outcomes in a surgical population of sporadic CRC patients. Patients operated on for sporadic CRC from January 2010 to January 2022 were allocated to the EOCRC and LOCRC groups. The primary endpoint was the recurrence/progression-free survival (R/PFS). A total of 423 EOCRC and 1650 LOCRC was included. EOCRC had a worse R/PFS (p p p = 0.014), and early age of onset was an independent predictor for recurrence (p = 0.035). Early age of onset was an independent predictor for worse prognosis, this effect was stronger in stage I patients suggesting a potentially—and still unknown—more aggressive tumoral phenotype in EOCRC.

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