Abstract

249 Background: Oxaliplatin-containing regimens are among the most efficacious adjuvant treatments for locally-advanced colon cancer, although significant toxicity can occur. Because of relevant level I data, the NCCN revised its guidelines in 2012, recommending omission of oxaliplatin from combination adjuvant chemotherapy regimens for older patients (>70yo) with colon cancer. We examined prescribing behavior of oncologists between 2009 and 2014 to evaluate how rapidly NCCN guidelines were adopted into practice. Methods: This is a retrospective observational study of chemotherapy request data from more than 2,000 community oncologists in the southeastern United States. We examined 57 consecutive months of chemotherapy requests for stage II and III colon cancer patients 70 years and older, based on three epochs. During the middle epoch, one phase III trial evaluating oxaliplatin-containing regimens as adjuvant chemotherapy (NSABP C-07), and a revised 2012 NCCN guidelines, each supported omission of oxaliplatin from adjuvant chemotherapy regimens for older persons with colon cancer. Multivariate analyses evaluated associations among patient characteristics (age, gender, and performance status), disease stage, and time-period, with the odds of receiving oxaliplatin-containing regimens as adjuvant chemotherapy. Results: Among 266 persons with stage II or III colon cancer 70 years of age and older, over the six-year span, most adjuvant chemotherapy requests (184/266, 69.2%) contained oxaliplatin. Older age, male gender, and poor performance status were associated with significantly lower odds of receiving oxaliplatin-containing adjuvant chemotherapy regimens (p<0.05), while time period (epoch) was not significantly associated with temporal changes in patterns of use. Conclusions: Use of oxaliplatin containing adjuvant chemotherapy regimens among older persons with colon cancer did not decrease following publication of phase III clinical trial data and revised NCCN guidelines recommending against oxaliplatin use in this setting. Focused quality improvement initiatives for this population of cancer patients may be helpful.

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