The clinical value of C-reactive protein and its association with tumour location in patients undergoing curative surgery for colorectal cancer – a ScotScan collaborative study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1080/0284186X.2022.2117572Keywords:
Colorectal cancer, systemic inflammation, tumour location, C-reactive proteinAbstract
IntroductionThe presence of preoperative systemic inflammatory response (SIR) is an established negative prognostic factor for patients diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC). C-reactive protein (CRP) is known to be implicated in detrimental immune responses. The biological differences between right-sided and left-sided CRC are gaining increasing attention. Our aim was to analyse the prognostic value of CRP and explore the association between tumour location and SIR.
Material and methodsA total of 2059 patients treated for stage I–III CRC, identified from the prospectively sampled ScotScan Collaborative dataset, were included. The clinical and prognostic value of five CRP levels (<10/11–30/31–60/61–100/>100 mg/l) were examined. Additionally, the relationship between SIR and tumour location was explored.
ResultsIncreasing levels of CRP were associated with impaired overall and cancer-specific outcome. Presence of SIR was independently associated with right-sided tumour location (p<0.001). However, the impact of SIR on cancer-specific survival (CSS) was greater for left-sided tumour location, even when adjusted for other clinicopathological factors.
ConclusionsThis study confirms CRP as a routinely available, valid, and clinically relevant strong prognostic marker of SIR in CRC patients. Right-sided tumours were more often associated with SIR, but the prognostic impact was stronger in left-sided tumours.
