SUMMARY: ColoRectal Cancer (CRC) is the third most common cancer diagnosed in both men and women in the United States. The American Cancer Society estimates that approximately 135,000 new cases of ColoRectal Cancer will be diagnosed in the United States in 2016 and over 49,000 patients are expected to die of the disease. Even though prognosis for patients with Colon Cancer has improved over the past two to three decades, it has remained unclear if improvement in survival was greater for Left sided Colon Cancer versus cancer originating in the Right hemicolon. To address this question, the authors in this study used the Geneva population-based registry and collected the data on all Colon Cancer patients from 1980-2006. They then compared outcomes ided Tumorsin 3396 patients with proximal (Right-sided) and distal (Left-sided) Colon Cancer. In the study population, 1,334 patients (39%) had Right-sided tumors and 2,062 (61%) had Left-sided tumors. Colon Cancer specific survival was then determined and compared, taking into consideration tumor and treatment characteristics of Left and Right sided tumors, as well as putative confounding variables. The authors also compared changes in survival between Colon Cancer location in early and late years of this observation study.
At the beginning of the study period (1980s), the 5-year specific survival was identical for Right and Left sided Colon Cancers (49% versus 48%). However, over the course of the study period, there was a marked improvement in survival, for patients with Left-sided cancers (HR=0.42; P<0.001), but this benefit was not noted in Right-sided Colon Cancer patients (HR=0.76; P=0.69). As such, distal Colon Cancer (Left sided) had a better prognosis than patients with proximal or Right sided Colon Cancer (Hazard Ratio for Left versus Right Colon Cancer = 0.81; P<0.001).
The authors concluded from this study that survival of patients with Right Colon Cancer did not improve since 1980, and tend to have the worse prognosis of all Colon Cancer patients. Therefore, change in treatment strategy is warranted for this patient subgroup. Right colon cancer: left behind. Gervaza P, Usel M, Rapiti E, et al. European Journal of Surgical Oncology 2016;doi:10.1016/j.ejso.2016.04.002