Background: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) confers an increased lifetime risk of colorectal cancer (CRC). The pathogenesis of colitis-associated CRC is considered distinct from sporadic CRC, but existing is mixed on long-term oncologic outcomes. This study aims to compare clinicopathological characteristics and survival between colitis-associated and sporadic CRC.
Methods: Data was retrospectively extracted and analyzed from a single institutional database of patients with surgically resected CRC between 2004 and 2015. Patients with IBD were identified as having colitis-associated CRC. The remainder were classified as sporadic CRC. Propensity score matching was performed. Univariate and survival analyses were carried out to estimate the differences between the two groups.
Results: Of 2275 patients included in this analysis, 65 carried a diagnosis of IBD (2.9%, 33 Crohn's disease, 29 ulcerative colitis, 3 indeterminate colitis). Average age at CRC diagnosis was 62 years for colitis-associated CRC and 65 for sporadic CRC. The final propensity score matched cohort consisted of 65 colitis-associated and 130 sporadic CRC cases. Patients with colitis-associated CRC were more likely to undergo total proctocolectomy (p < 0.01) and had higher incidence of locoregional recurrence (p = 0.026) compared to sporadic CRC patients. There were no significant differences in time to recurrence, tumor grade, extramural vascular invasion, perineural invasion, or rate of R0 resections. Overall survival and disease-free survival did not differ between groups. On multiple Cox regression, IBD diagnosis was not a significant predictor of survival.
Conclusions: Patients with colitis-associated CRC who undergo surgical resection have comparable overall and disease-free survival to patients with sporadic CRC.
Keywords: Colitis-associated colorectal cancer; Inflammatory bowel disease; Sporadic colorectal cancer; Survival.
© 2023. The Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract.