Adjuvant Therapy for Stage II Colon Cancer: ASCO Guideline Update

Nancy N. Baxter(The University of Melbourne), Erin B. Kennedy(American Society of Clinical Oncology), Emily K. Bergsland(UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center), Jordan Berlin(Vanderbilt University Medical Center), Thomas J. George(University of Florida), Sharlene Gill, Philip J. Gold, A. Hantel(Edward Hospital), Lee Jones, Christopher H. Lieu(University of Colorado Cancer Center), Najjia N. Mahmoud(Penn Center for AIDS Research), Arden M. Morris(Stanford Medicine), Erika Ruíz‐García(Instituto Nacional de Cancerología), Y. Nancy You(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Jeffrey A. Meyerhardt(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)
Journal of Clinical Oncology
December 22, 2021
Cited by 325Open Access
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Abstract

PURPOSE: To develop recommendations for adjuvant therapy for patients with resected stage II colon cancer. METHODS: ASCO convened an Expert Panel to conduct a systematic review of relevant studies and develop recommendations for clinical practice. RESULTS: Twenty-one observational studies and six randomized controlled trials met the systematic review inclusion criteria. RECOMMENDATIONS: Adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) is not routinely recommended for patients with stage II colon cancer who are not in a high-risk subgroup. Patients with T4 tumors are at higher risk of recurrence and should be offered ACT, whereas patients with other high-risk factors, including sampling of fewer than 12 lymph nodes in the surgical specimen, perineural or lymphovascular invasion, poorly or undifferentiated tumor grade, intestinal obstruction, tumor perforation, or grade BD3 tumor budding, may be offered ACT. The addition of oxaliplatin to fluoropyrimidine-based ACT is not routinely recommended, but may be offered as a result of shared decision making. Patients with mismatch repair deficiency/microsatellite instability tumors should not be routinely offered ACT; if the combination of mismatch repair deficiency/microsatellite instability and high-risk factors results in a decision to offer ACT, oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy is recommended. Duration of oxaliplatin-containing chemotherapy is also addressed, with recommendations for 3 or 6 months of treatment with capecitabine and oxaliplatin or fluorouracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin, with decision making informed by key evidence of 5-year disease-free survival in each treatment subgroup and the rate of adverse events, including peripheral neuropathy.Additional information is available at www.asco.org/gastrointestinal-cancer-guidelines.


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