Tumor Diameter Is an Easy and Useful Predictor of Recurrence in Stage II Colorectal Cancer
Background/Aims: Adjuvant chemotherapy for stage II colorectal cancer (CRC) can generally be administered to high-risk subgroups. To better identify these patients, we aimed at assessing factors that affect recurrence. Methods: In our hospital, 432 colon and 96 rectal stage II cancer patients who underwent surgical resection between 2001 and 2011 were divided into recurrence and non-recurrence groups. Age, sex, lymphatic vessel invasion, venous invasion, tumor diameter, tumor depth, histological type, preoperative carcinoembryonic antigen level, number of sampled nodes, adjuvant chemotherapy, morphology, surgical approach, anastomotic leakage, preoperative bowel obstruction, and preoperative perforation were retrospectively compared between the groups. Results: For colon cancer, multivariate analysis revealed a significant association between tumor diameter ≥40 mm and recurrence (p = 0.039). For rectal cancer, multivariate analysis revealed that tumor diameter ≥50 mm (p = 0.001) and ≤12 sampled nodes (p = 0.021) were associated with recurrence. Tumor diameter in rectal cancer was associated with worse disease-free survival (p = 0.026). Conclusion: Tumor diameter is a significant predictor of recurrence in stage II CRC. This is an important finding because tumor diameter is easy to evaluate clinically and might help to identify candidates for adjuvant chemotherapy.