Abstract

IntroductionTwenty-five percent of stage II colon cancer (CC) patients relapse within 5 years due to minimal residual disease (MRD) not eliminated by surgery. We hypothesise that subtypes of MRD, defined by circulating tumour cells (CTCs) and bone marrow micrometastasis (mM), have different types and kinetics of relapse.Methods and patientsOne month after surgery, blood and bone marrow samples were taken to detect CTCs and mM using immunocytochemistry with anti-carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). Follow-up was for up to 5 years or relapse. Disease-free survival curves using Kaplan–Meier (DFS) and restricted mean disease-free survival times (RMST) were calculated for three prognostic groups: A: MRD (−), B: mM (+) CTC (−) MRD and C: CTC (+) MRD.ResultsOne hundred and eighty-one patients (82 men) have participated, mean age was 68 years and median follow-up was 4.04 years (A (N = 105), B (N = 36) and C (N = 40)). For the whole cohort of 5 years, DFS was 70%, median DFS has not reached (Groups A: 98%, B: 63% and C: 7%) and median DFS for Groups A and B have not reached. RMST for the whole cohort of 4.1 years, Group A was 4.9 years, B was 4.1 years and C was 1.7 years. Serum CEA was significantly higher in Group C. No significant differences for sex, age or high-risk adverse prognostic factors between groups were detected.ConclusionsMRD subtypes define relapse patterns and may be useful to define the risk of relapse in stage II CC patients, in which patients may benefit or not from additional therapy and warrants further studies with a larger number of patients.

Highlights

  • Twenty-five percent of stage II colon cancer (CC) patients relapse within 5 years due to minimal residual disease (MRD) not eliminated by surgery

  • MRD subtypes define relapse patterns and may be useful to define the risk of relapse in stage II CC patients, in which patients may benefit or not from additional therapy and warrants further studies with a larger number of patients

  • The development of metastasis is the result of occult tumour dissemination prior to surgery; tumour cells that remain after curative surgery are termed as a minimal residual disease (MRD)

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Summary

Introduction

Twenty-five percent of stage II colon cancer (CC) patients relapse within 5 years due to minimal residual disease (MRD) not eliminated by surgery. Stage II colon cancer is a heterogeneous disease, and up to 25% of patients treated by surgery alone will develop metastasis [3]. Patients having one or more of the following characteristics are classified as high risk: stage pT4, poorly differentiated tumour, intestinal perforation, lymphovascular/perineural invasion and less than 12 lymph nodes examined and positive surgical margins [4,5,6]. The development of metastasis is the result of occult tumour dissemination prior to surgery; tumour cells that remain after curative surgery are termed as a minimal residual disease (MRD)

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