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Colon cancer in France: evidence for improvement in management and survival
  1. C Faivre-Finn,
  2. A-M Bouvier-Benhamiche,
  3. J M Phelip,
  4. S Manfredi,
  5. V Dancourt,
  6. J Faivre
  1. Registre Bourguignon des Cancers Digestifs (INSERM EPI 106), Faculté de Medecine, BP 87900, 21079 Dijon, France
  1. Correspondence to:
    C Faivre-Finn, Registre Bourguignon des Cancers Digestifs (INSERM EPI 106), Faculte de Medecine, 7 Boulevard Jeanne d'Arc, 21079 BP 87900, Dijon, France;
    jean.faivre{at}u-bourgogne.fr

Abstract

Background: Cancer registries recording all cases diagnosed in a well defined population represent the only way to assess real changes in the management of colon cancer at the population level.

Aims: To determine trends over a 23 year period in treatment, stage at diagnosis, and prognosis of colon cancer in the Côte-d'Or region, France.

Patients: A total of 3389 patients with colon cancer diagnosed between 1976 and 1998.

Methods: Time trends in clinical presentation, surgical treatment, chemotherapy treatment, stage at diagnosis, postoperative mortality, and survival were studied. A non-conditional logistic regression was performed to obtain an odds ratio for each period adjusted for the other variables. To estimate the independent effect of the period on prognosis, a relative survival analysis was performed.

Results: Between 1976 and 1991, the resection rate increased from 69.3% to 91.9% and then remained stable. This increase was particularly marked in the older age group (56.4% to 90.5%). The proportion of stage III patients treated with adjuvant chemotherapy rose from 4.1% for the 1989–1990 period to 45.7% for the 1997–1998 period. Over the 23 years of the study the proportion of stage I and II patients increased from 39.6% to 56.6%, associated with a corresponding decrease in the proportion of patients with advanced stages. Postoperative mortality decreased from 19.5% to 7.3%. This led to an improvement in five year relative survival (from 33.0% for the 1976–1979 period to 55.3% for the 1992–1995 period).

Conclusions: Advances in the management of colon cancer have resulted in improving the prognosis of this disease. However, progress is still possible, particularly in the older age group.

  • colon carcinoma
  • survival
  • cancer registries
  • time trends

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