Title of article :
Prognostic Factors Affecting Short- and Long-Term Recurrence-Free Survival of Patients with Rectal Cancer using Cure Models: A Cohort Study
Author/Authors :
Hosseini, Vahid Department of Surgery - Colorectal Research Center - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran , Rezaianzadeh, Abbas Department of Epidemiology - Colorectal Research Center- Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Iran , Rahimikazerooni, Salar Colorectal Research center - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Iran , Ghahramani, Leila Department of Surgery - Colorectal Research Center - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran , Bananzadeh, Alimohammad Department of Surgery - Colorectal Research Center - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Understanding the prognostic factors affecting
the recurrence-free survival (RFS) of patients with rectal cancer
(RC) is the mainstay of care. The present study aimed to identify
factors affecting both short- and long-term RFS of patients with
RC using semiparametric mixture cure models.
Methods: The data were obtained from the database of the
Colorectal Research Center of Shiraz University of Medical
Sciences, Shiraz, Iran, which was collected during 2007-2017.
To determine the factors affecting recurrence, cure models
were applied to short-term and long-term RFS of patients
with RC separately. The cure rate was calculated using the
smcure package in R 3.5.1 (2018-07-02) software. P<0.05 was
considered statistically significant.
Results: Out of the 376 eligible patients with RC, 75.8% of
men and 74.5% of women were long-term survivors. The mean
age of the patients was 57.0±13.8 years. Lymph node ratio
(LNR)≤0.2 increased the probability of short-term RFS. The
prominent factors affecting long-term RFS were body mass
index (BMI)<25 kg/m2 (OR=1.98, P=0.047), tumor-nodemetastasis (TNM) stage (OR=6.48, P<0.001), abdominal pain
(OR=2.15, P=0.007), and computed tomography (CT) scan
detected pelvic lymph nodes (OR=3.40, P=0.01). Over a 9-year
follow-up period, the empirical and estimated values of cure
rates were 75.3% and 83.9%, respectively.
Conclusion: The results showed that factors affecting shortterm RFS might be different from long-term RFS. A lower BMI
was related to a poorer prognosis in patients with RC. Early
diagnosis leads to a lower TNM stage and could increase the
probability of long-term RFS.
Keywords :
Cure model , Rectal neoplasms , Recurrence , Lymph node ratio , Survival
Journal title :
Iranian Journal of Medical Sciences (IJMS)