Abstract

e18084 Background: CRC is the second leading cause of cancer death in the US. Social support and financial resources vary by marital status. This study analyzes the impact of marital status by sex on survival after resection for CRC. Methods: The New York State Cancer Registry and Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System were queried for 2004-2013 colectomy or proctectomy Stage I-III CRC patients and categorized by marital status: single/never married (single), married/domestic partner (married), and widowed/separated/divorced (previously married). Competing risk analysis of 5-year mortality was executed adjusting for patient (age at diagnosis, sex, race, Medicaid, income, marital status, smoking history, comorbidities, year of diagnosis, and stage), treatment (scheduled surgery and complications, chemotherapy, radiation), surgeon (colorectal board, volume), and hospital factors (volume, academic, rural). Results: 38,020 (colon 32,451, rectal 5,569) met inclusion criteria, of which 28% died within 5 years. Single patients were more likely than married to be current smokers (17 vs 12%), be on Medicaid (42 vs 27%) and present emergently (38 vs 25%), and less likely to be treated by high volume surgeons (32 vs 40%). Married patients had decreased risk of 5-year CRC-specific mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 0.86, confidence interval [CI] 0.80-0.94) vs single. When stratified by sex, married males had a decreased risk of death but married females did not and this persists if stratified by colon vs rectum (Table). Income was not significantly associated with survival and previously married patients did not significantly differ from single. Conclusions: Marital status impacts CRC-specific survival in males and females differently. Married men have a protective effect from marriage, whereas married females do not and may benefit from additional support throughout their cancer care. [Table: see text]

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