Abstract

BackgroundThe incidence of colon cancer in young patients is on the rise, of which adenocarcinoma is the most common pathological type. However, a reliable nomogram for early onset colon adenocarcinoma (EOCA) to predict prognosis is currently lacking. This study aims to develop nomograms for predicting the overall survival (OS) and cancer-specific survival (CSS) of patients with EOCA.MethodsPatients diagnosed with EOCA from 2010 to 2015 were included and randomly assigned to training set and validation set. Cox regression models were used to evaluate prognosis and identify independent predictive factors, which were then utilized to establish the nomograms for predicting 3- and 5-year OS and CSS. The discrimination and calibration of nomograms were validated using the calibration plots, concordance index, receiver operating characteristics curve, and the decision curve analysis.ResultsA total of 2,348 patients were screened out, with 1,644 categorized into the training set and 704 into the validation set. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that gender, age, tumor size, T stage, M stage, regional node, tumor deposits, lung metastasis and perineural invasion were significantly correlated with OS and CSS. The calibration plots indicated that there was good consistency between the nomogram prediction and actual observation. The C-indices for training set of OS and CSS prediction nomograms were 0.735 (95% CI: 0.708–0.762) and 0.765 (95% CI: 0.739–0.791), respectively, whereas those for validation set were 0.736 (95% CI: 0.696–0.776) and 0.76 (95% CI: 0.722–0.798), respectively. The results of ROC analysis revealed the nomograms showed a good discriminate power. The 3- and 5-year DCA curves displayed superiority over TNM staging system with higher net benefit gains.ConclusionsThe nomograms established could effectively predict 3- and 5-year OS and CSS in EOCA patients, which assisted clinicians to evaluate prognosis more accurately and optimize treatment strategies.

Highlights

  • Colon carcinoma is the most common malignant tumor of the digestive tract, ranking fourth in deaths from malignant tumors worldwide

  • This study aims to develop nomograms for predicting the overall survival (OS) and cancerspecific survival (CSS) of patients with Early onset colon adenocarcinoma (EOCA)

  • Multivariate analysis demonstrated that gender, age, tumor size, T stage, M stage, regional node, tumor deposits, lung metastasis and perineural invasion were significantly correlated with OS and CSS

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Summary

Introduction

Colon carcinoma is the most common malignant tumor of the digestive tract, ranking fourth in deaths from malignant tumors worldwide. Colon adenocarcinoma (CA) is deemed as the most common one, accounting for 60%–70% of all cases with a poor prognosis. Onset colon adenocarcinoma (EOCA) is defined as CA patients under the age of 50 at diagnosis (4). Concerns have been raised over the increasing incidence and the poor clinical outcomes, and it is essential to precisely identify the prognostic factors associated with EOCA and choose personalized treatment strategies. The incidence of colon cancer in young patients is on the rise, of which adenocarcinoma is the most common pathological type. A reliable nomogram for early onset colon adenocarcinoma (EOCA) to predict prognosis is currently lacking. This study aims to develop nomograms for predicting the overall survival (OS) and cancerspecific survival (CSS) of patients with EOCA

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