Abstract
Purpose. Local hypoxia has been linked to a higher risk of metastasis in patients with cancer of the uterine cervix and a haemoglobin concentration of 7.45 mmol/l or less. It is unknown whether the same holds true for rectal cancer. We evaluated the independent impact of pre-operative anaemia on survival in patients with rectal cancer.Patients and methods. A random set of 144 patients diagnosed with Dukes' A, B or C rectal cancer in the period 1995–1999 and registered in the database of the Eindhoven Cancer Registry was included in a survival analysis. Parameters tested were gender, age, pre-operative haemoglobin concentration, tumour stage and therapy. The ones that showed a relation with survival (log-rank test, p<0.1) were entered in a multivariate analysis.Results. For patients without pre-operative anaemia, the hazard ratio of death was 0.35 (95% confidence interval 0.19–0.65, p=0.001), which indicates a three times higher mortality risk. For patients with a higher tumour stage (Dukes' B vs. Dukes' A or Dukes' C vs. Dukes' B) the hazard ratio of death was 1.52 (95% CI 1.04–2.23, p=0.03). For older patients (64–73 years vs. <64 years or >73 years vs. 64–73 years) the hazard ratio of death was 1.85 (95% CI 1.29–2.63, p=0.001).Conclusion. Long-term survival was significantly affected in rectal cancer patients with pre-operative anaemia. Further study on the relation between anaemia, tumour oxygenation and prognosis is needed, as it may have implications for future therapy.
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