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Prognostic Impact of Tumor-Budding Grade in Stages 1-3 Colon Cancer: A Retrospective Cohort Study

Title
Prognostic Impact of Tumor-Budding Grade in Stages 1-3 Colon Cancer: A Retrospective Cohort Study
Authors
Oh, Bo YoungPark, Yoon AhHuh, Jung WookYun, Seong HyeonKim, Hee CheolChun, Ho-KyungKim, Seok HyungHa, Sang YunLee, Woo YongCho, Yong Beom
Ewha Authors
오보영
SCOPUS Author ID
오보영scopus
Issue Date
2018
Journal Title
ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
ISSN
1068-9265JCR Link

1534-4681JCR Link
Citation
ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 204 - 211
Publisher
SPRINGER
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Tumor budding is associated with adverse histology and is a predictor of lymph node metastasis. However, it remains unclear whether tumor budding is predictive of a poor prognosis for colon cancer patients. This study sought to investigate the prognostic significance of tumor budding in colon cancer. This study evaluated 4196 colon cancer patients who underwent radical surgery from 2007 to 2013 at a single institution. The patients were categorized according to tumor-budding status. Adjustment was made for using propensity score-matched analysis, and both disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS) were compared between the groups. Among the 4196 patients, 2269 had low budding (< 5 buds), 1312 had intermediate budding (5-9 buds), and 615 had high budding (>= 10 buds). High budding was associated with adverse histologic features such as elevated levels of preoperative carcinoembryonic antigen, advanced stage, poor histology, and the presence of lymphatic/vascular/perineural invasion. Before matching, DFS and OS decreased significantly with increasing tumor budding. After matching, the difference in survival between the low- and intermediate-budding groups disappeared. However, the OS and DFS rates for the high-budding group were significantly lower than for the other two groups. In the multivariate analysis of prognostic factors, high budding was an independent poor prognostic factor in DFS and OS, whereas tumor-budding positivity itself was not an independent prognostic factor. Tumor-budding grade rather than tumor-budding positivity was an independent prognostic factor in colon cancer.
DOI
10.1245/s10434-017-6135-5
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의료원 > 의료원 > Journal papers
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