Adjuvant chemotherapy in colorectal cancer: A joint analysis of randomised trials by the Nordic Gastrointestinal Tumour Adjuvant Therapy Group

Authors

  • Bengt Glimelius Department of Oncology, Radiology and Clinical Immunology, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden; Department of Oncology and Pathology, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  • Olav Dahl Section of Oncology, Institute of Medicine, University of Bergen and Department of Oncology, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway
  • Björn Cedermark Department of Surgery, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  • Anders Jakobsen Department of Oncology, Vejle Hospital, Vejle, Denmark
  • Søren M. Bentzen University of Wisconsin Medical School, Department of Human Oncology, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
  • Hans Starkhammar Department of Oncology, University Hospital, Linköping, Sweden
  • Henrik Grönberg Department of Oncology, University Hospital, Umeå, Sweden
  • Ragnar Hultborn Department of Oncology, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Göteborg, Sweden
  • Maria Albertsson Department of Oncology, Malmö University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden
  • Lars Påhlman Department of Surgery, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden
  • Kjell-Magne Tveit Department of Oncology, Ullevål University Hospital, Oslo, Norway

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/02841860500355900a

Abstract

Due to uncertainties regarding clinically meaningful gains from adjuvant chemotherapy after colorectal cancer surgery, several Nordic Groups in the early 1990s initiated randomised trials to prove or reject such gains. This report gives the joint analyses after a minimum 5-year follow-up. Between October 1991 and December 1997, 2 224 patients under 76 years of age with colorectal cancer stages II and III were randomised to surgery alone (n = 1 121) or adjuvant chemotherapy (n = 1 103) which varied between trials (5FU/levamisole for 12 months, n = 444; 5FU/leucovorin for 4–5 months according to either a modified Mayo Clinic schedule (n = 262) or the Nordic schedule (n = 397). Some centres also randomised patients treated with 5FU/leucovorin to ± levamisole). A total of 812 patients had colon cancer stage II, 708 colon cancer stage III, 323 rectal cancer stage II and 368 rectal cancer stage III. All analyses were according to intention-to-treat. No statistically significant difference in overall survival, stratified for country or region, could be found in any group of patients according to stage or site. In colon cancer stage III, an absolute difference of 7% (p = 0.15), favouring chemotherapy, was seen. The present analyses corroborate a small but clinically meaningful survival gain from adjuvant chemotherapy in colon cancer stage III, but not in the other presentations.

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Published

2005-01-01

How to Cite

Glimelius, B. ., Dahl, O. ., Cedermark, B. ., Jakobsen, A. ., Bentzen, S. M. ., Starkhammar, H. ., … Tveit, K.-M. . (2005). Adjuvant chemotherapy in colorectal cancer: A joint analysis of randomised trials by the Nordic Gastrointestinal Tumour Adjuvant Therapy Group. Acta Oncologica, 44(8), 904–912. https://doi.org/10.1080/02841860500355900a