Early-Onset Colorectal Cancer Patients Do Not Require Shorter Intervals for Post-Surgical Surveillance Colonoscopy

Robin B. Mendelsohn,Anne I. Hahn, Randze Lerie Palmaira, Asha R. Saxena, Pavan Kedar Mukthinuthalapati,Mark A. Schattner,Arnold J. Markowitz,Emmy Ludwig, Pari Shah,Delia Calo,Hans Gerdes,Rona Yaeger, Zsofia Stadler,Ann G. Zauber,Andrea Cercek

Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology(2024)

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摘要
Background Early-onset colorectal cancer (EO-CRC), diagnosed before age 50, is rising in incidence worldwide. Although post-surgical colonoscopy surveillance strategies exist, appropriate intervals in EO-CRC remain elusive, as long-term surveillance outcomes remain scant. We sought to compare findings of surveillance colonoscopies of EO-CRC to average onset colorectal cancer (AO-CRC) patients to help define surveillance outcomes in these groups. Methods Single institution retrospective chart review identified EO-CRC and AO-CRC patients with colonoscopy and no evidence of disease. Surveillance intervals and time to development of advanced neoplasia (CRC and advanced polyps (adenoma/sessile serrated)) were examined. For each group, three serial surveillance colonoscopies were evaluated. Statistical analyses were performed utilizing log-ranked Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazards. Results A total of 1259 CRC patients were identified, with 612 and 647 patients in the EO-CRC and AO-CRC groups, respectively. Compared to AO-CRC patients, EO-CRC patients had a 29% decreased risk of developing advanced neoplasia from time of initial surgery to first surveillance colonoscopy (HR=0.71, 95% CI 0.52 – 1.0). Average follow-up time from surgical resection to first surveillance colonoscopy was 12.6 months for both cohorts. Overall surveillance findings differed between cohorts (p=0.003), and EO-CRC were found to have less advanced neoplasia compared to AO-CRC counterparts (12.4% vs 16.0%, respectively). Subsequent colonoscopies found that while EO-CRC patients returned for follow-up surveillance colonoscopy earlier than AO-CRC patients, the EO-CRC cohort did not have more advanced neoplasia nor non-advanced adenomas. Conclusions EO-CRC patients do not have an increased risk of advanced neoplasia compared to AO-CRC patients and therefore do not require more frequent colonoscopy surveillance than current guidelines recommend.
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关键词
Early-onset colorectal cancer,colonoscopy,adenoma,neoplasia,surveillance
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