Long-term survival following elective colon cancer surgery in the aged. A population-based cohort study.

2020 
AIM The number of colorectal cancer patients increases with age. Long-term data supports personalized management due to heterogeneity within the older population. This registry- and population-based study aimed to analyse long-term survival, and causes of death, after elective colon cancer surgery in the aged, focusing on patients who survived more than three months postoperatively. METHODS The data included patients ≥80 years who had elective surgery for stage I-III colon cancer in four Finnish centres. The prospectively collected data included comorbidities, functional status, postoperative outcomes, and long-term survival. Uni- and multivariable Cox regression analysis were conducted to determine factors associated with long-term survival. RESULTS A total of 386 surgical patients were included, of whom 357 survived over three months. Survival rates for all patients at 1, 3- and 5-years were 85%, 66% and 55%, compared to 92%, 71% and 59% for patients alive three months postoperatively, respectively. Higher age, ASA ≥ 4, Charlson Comorbidity Index ≥ 6, tumour stage III, open compared to laparoscopic surgery, and severe postoperative complications were independently associated with reduced overall survival. Higher age (HR 1.97, 1.14-3.40), diabetes (1.56, 1.07-2.27), ASA ≥4 (3.27, 1.53-6.99) and tumour stage III (2.04, 1.48-2.81) were the patient-related variables affecting survival amongst those surviving more than three months postoperatively. Median survival time for patients given adjuvant chemotherapy was 5.4 years, compared to 3.3 years for patients not given postoperative treatment. CONCLUSIONS Fit aged colon cancer patients can achieve good long-term outcomes and survival with radical, minimally invasive surgical treatment, even with additional chemotherapy.
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