Temporal improvements in loco-regional failure and survival in patients with anal cancer treated with chemo-radiotherapy: treatment cohort study (1990–2014)

Hema Sekhar(University of Manchester), Lee Malcomson(University of Manchester), Rohit Kochhar(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Matthew Sperrin(University of Manchester), Nooreen Alam(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Bipasha Chakrbarty(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Paul Fulford(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Malcolm Wilson(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Sarah O’Dwyer(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Mark Saunders(The Christie NHS Foundation Trust), Andrew G. Renehan(Manchester Academic Health Science Centre)
British Journal of Cancer
January 14, 2020
Cited by 22Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Background We evaluated oncological changes in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the anus (SCCA) treated by chemoradiotherapy (CRT) from a large UK institute, to derive estimates of contemporary outcomes. Methods We performed a treatment-cohort analysis in 560 patients with non-metastatic SCCA treated with CRT over 25 years. The primary outcomes were 3-year loco-regional failure (LRF), 5-year overall survival (OS), and 5-year cancer-specific survival (CSS). We developed prediction models; and overlaid estimates on published results from historic trials. Results Age distributions, proportions by gender and cT stage remained stable over time. The median follow-up was 61 (IQR: 36–79) months. Comparing the first period (1990–1994) with the last period (2010–2014), 3-year LRF declined from 33 to 16% ( P trends < 0.001); 5-year OS increased from 60% to 76% ( P trends = 0.001); and 5-year CCS increased from 62% in to 80% ( P trends = 0.001). For 2020, the models predicted a 3-year LRF of 14.7% (95% CIs: 0–31.3); 5-year OS of 74.7% (95% CIs: 54.6–94.9); and 5-year CSS of 85.7% (95% CIs: 75.3–96.0). Reported oncological outcomes from historic trials generally underestimated contemporary outcomes. Conclusions Current and predicted rates for 3-year LRF and 5-year survivals are considerably improved compared with those in historic trials.


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