Treatment dependent improvements in survival of stage 2/3 rectal cancer patients treated with trimodality therapy between 2006-2016, an NCDB analysis.

Document Type

Abstract

Publication Date

2021

Publication Title

2021 ASCO Annual Meeting

Keywords

oregon; portland; chiles

Abstract

Research Funding:

None

Background:Trimodality therapy (TT) with chemo/radiation (C/RT), chemotherapy and total mesorectal excision (TME) surgery remains the standard for patients with stage 2/3 rectal cancer. Use of pre-operative (pre-op) C/RT is an important Commission on Cancer (CoC) quality benchmark but has not previously been shown to improve overall survival when compared to post-op C/RT. The objective of this study was to document the impact on survival of peri-op C/RT in stage 2/3 rectal cancer in a broad population.Methods:The National Cancer Database was used to identify all patients diagnosed with stage 2/3 rectal cancer from 2006-16. Included patients received true TT and were classified into groups A, Total Neoadjuvant Therapy (TNT) with pre-op C/RT + pre-op multi-agent (MA) chemotherapy (CT); group B, pre-op C/RT+ post-op single-agent CT; group C, pre-op C/RT + post-op MA CT; and group D, post-op C/RT and MA CT. Cox multivariate survival analysis were performed including demographics, peri-op C/RT, surgery type, stage, lymph node count, year of diagnosis and facility type: academic (Acad), Comprehensive (Comp)/Community (Comm), Integrated (Integ) and unknown (Unkn).Results:Of 110,372 stage 2/3 patients, 32,467 received TT (mean age 58, 61% male) and were included. Of these, 8883 (27%, group A) received TNT, 5967 (18%) were in group B, 12,928 (40%) in group C, while 4,689 (14%) were in group D. A reduction in use of post-operative C/RT (group D) was observed between 2006 (28%) and 2016 (8%), p < .001, accompanied by a reciprocal increase in patients receiving pre-op C/RT and post-op MA CT (Group C) between 2006 and 2016 (24 to 45%, respectively, p<0.001). Increasing use of pre-op C/RT led to a migration to lower pathologic stages 0/1/2/3 from 0.60/10/31/57% in 2006, to 2.8/22/29/45% in 2016, respectively (p < .001), while clinical stage 2/3 distribution remained unchanged. Receipt of pre-operative C/RT (Groups A/B/C) was associated with improved survival compared to post-op C/RT (group D) (table).Conclusions:Between 2006-2016 the proportion of patients with stage 2/3 rectal cancer treated with post-op C/RT declined dramatically and in 2016 accounted for 8% of all patients treated with TT. Multivariate analysis documented superior overall survival among patients treated with pre-operative C/RT, justifying the introduction of the CoC quality benchmark.

Clinical Institute

Cancer

Department

Oncology

Department

Earle A. Chiles Research Institute

Comments

Hagen F. Kennecke, Henry T. Bahnson, Bruce S. Lin, Jennifer Kaplan, Huong Pham, Andrew Suen, Val Simianu


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