Management of malignant T1 colorectal cancer polyps: results from a 10-year prospective observational study

Johnstone, M. S., McSorley, S. T. and McMahon, A. J. (2023) Management of malignant T1 colorectal cancer polyps: results from a 10-year prospective observational study. Colorectal Disease, 25(10), pp. 1960-1972. (doi: 10.1111/codi.16716) (PMID:37612791)

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Abstract

Aim: The recurrence risk associated with residual malignant cells (bowel wall/regional nodes) following T1 colorectal cancer (CRC) polypectomy must be weighed against operative morbidity. Our aim was to describe the management and outcomes of a large prospective cohort of T1 CRCs. Method: All T1 CRCs diagnosed between March 2007 and March 2017 at the Glasgow Royal Infirmary were included. Patients were grouped by polypectomy, rectal local excision and formal resection status. χ2 testing, multivariate binary logistic and Cox regression were performed. Results: Of 236 patients, 90 (38.1%) underwent polypectomy only, six (2.6%) polypectomy and then rectal excision, 57 (24.2%) polypectomy and then resection, 14 (5.9%) rectal excision only and 69 (29.2%) primary resection. Polypectomy only correlated with male sex (P = 0.028), older age (P < 0.001), distal CRCs (P < 0.001) and pedunculated polyps (P < 0.001); primary resection with larger polyps (P < 0.001); polypectomy then resection with piecemeal excision (P = 0.002) and involved polypectomy margin (P < 0.001). Poor differentiation (OR 7.860, 95% CI 1.117–55.328; P = 0.038) independently predicted lymph node involvement. Submucosal venous invasion (hazard ratio [HR] 10.154, 95% CI 2.087–49.396; P = 0.004) and mucinous subtype (HR 7.779, 95% CI 1.566–38.625; P = 0.012) independently predicted recurrence. Submucosal venous invasion (HR 5.792, 95% CI 1.056–31.754; P = 0.043) predicted CRC-specific survival. Although 64.4% of polypectomy-only patients had margin involvement/other risk factors, none developed recurrence. Of 94 with polypectomy margin involvement, five (5.3%) had confirmed residual tumour. Overall, lymph node metastases (7.1%), recurrence (4.2%) and cancer-specific mortality (3.0%) were rare. Cancer-specific 5-year survival was high: polypectomy only (100%), polypectomy and then resection (98.2%), primary resection (100%). Conclusion: Surveillance may be safe for more T1 CRC polyp patients. Multidisciplinary team discussion and informed patient choice are critical.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Johnstone, Mr Mark and McMahon, Mr Andrew and McSorley, Dr Stephen
Authors: Johnstone, M. S., McSorley, S. T., and McMahon, A. J.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cancer Sciences
College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing
Journal Name:Colorectal Disease
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:1462-8910
ISSN (Online):1463-1318
Published Online:23 August 2023
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2023 The Authors
First Published:First published in Colorectal Disease 25(10):1960-1972
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons license

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