Abstract

BackgroundPopulation-based analysis for the liver metastases of small bowel cancer is currently lacking. This study aimed to analyze the frequency, prognosis and treatment modalities for newly diagnosed small bowel cancer patients with liver metastases.MethodsPatients with small bowel cancer diagnosed from 2010 to 2015 were extracted from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database. Binary logistic regression analysis was performed to determine predictors for the presence of liver metastases at diagnosis. Kaplan–Meier method and Cox regression analyses were performed for survival analyses.ResultsA total of 1461 small bowel cancer patients with liver metastases at initial diagnosis were identified, representing 16.5% of the entire set and 63.9% of the subset with metastatic disease to any distant site. Primary tumor with poorer histological type, larger tumor size, later N staging, more extrahepatic metastatic sites, and tumor on lower part of small intestine had increased propensity of developing liver metastases. The combined diagnostic model exhibited acceptable diagnostic efficiency with AUC value equal to 0.749. Patients with liver metastases had significant poorer survival (P < 0.001) than those without liver metastases. In addition, combination of surgery and chemotherapy (HR = 0.27, P < 0.001) conferred the optimal survival for patients with adenocarcinoma, while the optimal treatment options for NEC and GIST seemed to be surgery alone (HR = 0.24, P < 0.001) and chemotherapy alone (HR = 0.08, P = 0.022), respectively.ConclusionsThe combined predictor had a good ability to predict the presence of liver metastases. In addition, those patients with different histologic types should be treated with distinct therapeutic strategy for obtaining optimal survival.

Highlights

  • Population-based analysis for the liver metastases of small bowel cancer is currently lacking

  • Demographic characteristics of patients Based on the inclusion criteria, a total of 8831 patients with small bowel cancer were extracted from the SEER database, including 2457 (27.8%) adenocarcinoma, 5406 neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) (61.2%), and 968 gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) (11%)

  • Among the 2285 (25.9%) patients who had synchronous metastases at the time of diagnosis, a total of 1461 (63.9%) patients presented with synchronous liver metastases, which consisted of 506 adenocarcinoma, 863 NETs, and 92 GISTs

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Summary

Introduction

Population-based analysis for the liver metastases of small bowel cancer is currently lacking. This study aimed to analyze the frequency, prognosis and treatment modalities for newly diagnosed small bowel cancer patients with liver metastases. A certain proportion of small bowel cancer patients presented with evidence of distant metastases at the initial diagnosis, wherein liver exhibited the most common metastatic organ [5, 6]. Owing to the rarity of small bowel cancer with liver metastases, a population-based study regarding to the frequency as well as the prognosis for those population was still lacking. A large population based study concentrating on describing epidemiologic characteristics, prognosis and optimal treatment modalities of small bowel cancer patients with liver metastases was urgently needed

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