Abstract

BackgroundMetastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) remains a lethal disease. Survival, however, is increasing due to a growing number of treatment options. Yet due to the number of prognostic factors and their interactions, prediction of mortality is difficult. The aim of this study is to provide a clinical model supporting prognostication of mCRC mortality in daily practice.MethodsData from 1104 patients with mCRC in three prospective cancer datasets were used to construct and validate Cox models. Input factors for stepwise backward method variable selection were sex, RAS/BRAF-status, microsatellite status, treatment type (no treatment, systemic treatment with or without resection of metastasis), tumor load, location of primary tumor, metastatic patterns and synchronous or metachronous disease. The final prognostic model for prediction of survival at two and 3 years was validated via bootstrapping to obtain calibration and discrimination C-indices and dynamic time dependent AUC.ResultsAge, sidedness, number of organs with metastases, lung as only site of metastasis, BRAF mutation status and treatment type were selected for the model. Treatment type had the most prominent influence on survival (resection of metastasis HR 0.26, CI 0.21–0.32; any treatment vs no treatment HR 0.31, CI 0.21–0.32), followed by BRAF mutational status (HR 2.58, CI 1.19–1.59). Validation showed high accuracy with C-indices of 72.2 and 71.4%, and dynamic time dependent AUC’s of 76.7 ± 1.53% (both at 2 or 3 years), respectively.ConclusionThe mCRC mortality prediction model is well calibrated and internally valid. It has the potential to support both, clinical prognostication for treatment decisions and patient communication.

Highlights

  • Metastatic colorectal cancer remains a lethal disease

  • It is established that BRAF mutated patients show the worst prognosis among all patients [15] and the consensus molecular subtypes give a deeper insight into the biology of the disease [16, 17]

  • Characteristics of the patient sample In total, 2915 patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer were identified in three distinct registries

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Summary

Introduction

Metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) remains a lethal disease. Survival, is increasing due to a growing number of treatment options. Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most common malignant diseases in the world and has one of the highest cancer-related mortality rates [1, 2]. Both incidence and mortality from CRC have decreased over the last decades. This is due to several factors, but Rumpold et al BMC Cancer (2020) 20:1149 accurate prognosis is one of the most important pieces of information provided to patients by oncologists [5]. Patients who are BRAF mutated benefit from targeted treatment rather than from chemotherapy [20]

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