Survival Trends of Right- and Left-Sided Colon Cancer across Four Decades: A Norwegian Population-Based Study

Abstract

Background: Patients with right-sided colon cancer (RCC) and left-sided colon cancer (LCC) differ clinically and molecularly. The main objective was to investigate stage-stratified survival and recurrence of RCC and LCC across four 10-year periods.

Methods: Patients diagnosed from 1977 to 2016 with colon adenocarcinoma were included from the Cancer Registry of Norway. Primary tumor location (PTL) was defined as RCC if proximal and LCC if distal to the splenic flexure. Multivariable regressions were used to estimate HRs for overall survival (OS), recurrence-free survival (RFS), survival after recurrence (SAR), and excess HRs (eHR) for relative survival (RS).

Results: 72,224 patients were eligible for analyses [55.1% (n = 39,769/72,224) had RCC]. In 1977 to 1986, there was no difference between LCC and RCC in OS [HR, 1.01; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.97–1.06; P = 0.581] or RS (eHR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.90–1.02; P = 0.179). In 2007 to 2016, LCC had significantly better OS (HR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.80–0.87; P < 0.001) and RS (eHR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.72–0.81; P < 0.001) compared with RCC. The gradually diverging and significantly favorable prognosis for LCC was evident for distant disease across all time periods and for regional disease from 2007 onward. There was no difference in RFS between LCC and RCC in patients less than 75 years during 2007 to 2016 (HR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.91–1.08; P = 0.819); however, SAR was significantly better for LCC (HR, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.53–0.71; P < 0.001).

Conclusions: A gradually diverging and increasingly favorable prognosis was observed for patients with LCC with advanced disease over the past four decades.

Impact: Current PTL survival disparities stress the need for further exploring targetable molecular subgroups across and within different PTLs to further improve patient outcomes.

Introduction

Colon cancer is common worldwide (1). In Norway, more than 3,000 cases are diagnosed annually, and the incidence is increasing (2). Right-sided colon cancer (RCC) and left-sided colon cancer (LCC) are today considered to represent biological entities with different molecular, morphologic, and clinical features potentially reflected by different embryologic origin, and different carcinogenetic pathways (3). RCC are more commonly associated with microsatellite instability (MSI), BRAF mutation, and the CpG island methylator phenotype whereas LCC are more frequently chromosomally instable (3). There is a continuum of genetic aberrations from the proximal to distal colon (4). High-grade adenocarcinoma, signet-ring cell carcinoma, and mucinous histology are more frequent in RCC, whereas low-grade adenocarcinomas are more frequent in LCC (5, 6).

At the population level, RCC is associated with older age and more advanced stage at presentation compared with LCC (5). Currently patients with advanced RCC have inferior prognosis compared with LCC, but this may not be valid across all stages and time periods (7, 8). In recent trials, patients with metastatic RCC respond more poorly to chemotherapy and anti-EGFR therapy compared with LCC (9). This suggests that primary tumor location (PTL) is a predictor of response to therapy, rather than merely representing a prognostic factor discerning aggressive biology (10).

It is still not clear as to what extent the natural history of RCC differs from patients with LCC, and if the survival disparities observed today can partially be explained by diverging treatment efficacies across time. Based on the available evidence, we postulated that PTL harbors a combination of predictive and prognostic information and hypothesized a trend shift in survival between RCC and LCC across four decades as more effective treatment modalities have gradually been implemented. Hence, the main objective of this study was to investigate the impact of PTL on stage-stratified survival and recurrence across four 10-year periods in the screening-naïve Norwegian population.

Materials and MethodsStudy design and study population

Data on all colorectal cancer cases diagnosed from 1977 to 2016 were extracted from the Cancer Registry of Norway (CRN). CRN has systematically collected histologic and clinical notifications on all cancer cases in Norway since 1952 and receives death certificates from the Cause of Death Registry. The completeness for colon cancer is estimated to be 99.8% (11). We requested data on diagnosis based on the International Classification of Diseases (ICD), date of diagnosis, sex, age, stage, vital status (alive, deceased, emigrated), and last known vital status date. A subset of patients (2007–2016) had additional variables from the Norwegian Colorectal Cancer Registry including date of first local recurrence and/or metachronous distant metastasis. Confirmed cases of colon adenocarcinomas were included, i.e., other morphologies and rectal cancers were excluded. The study was approved by the CRN and the Data Protection Officer at Oslo University Hospital. Informed consent was waived since the study was strictly register-based.

Morphology

Morphology was coded according to the ICD for Oncology, Third Edition (ICDO-3), and grouped as adenocarcinomas, mucinous/serous/cystic (MSC) adenocarcinomas, and other carcinomas (Supplementary Table S1).

PTL

PTL was coded according to the ICD, Revision 7 (ICD-7) and ICDO-3, and grouped as RCC if proximal and LCC if distal to the splenic flexure (Supplementary Table S2). PTL according to ICD-7 was used when evaluating survival trends across four 10-year periods (1977–2016) and ICDO-3 was used when evaluating recurrence during the last 10-year period (2007–2016). Patients with more than one synchronous or metachronous primary cancer were excluded.

Staging

Stage was coded according to an in-house coding system consistent with the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results Program (SEER) Summary staging Manual 2000 (12). In brief, categories were defined as (i) localized if the cancer had not metastasized to lymph nodes or other organs, (ii) regional if the cancer had metastasized to regional lymph nodes and/or had direct extension to surrounding tissues/organs, (iii) distant if the cancer had metastasized to distant lymph nodes or other organs, and (iv) unknown if data could not reliably assert extent of disease. A metastasis was defined as synchronous if diagnosed during the 4 subsequent calendar months after primary diagnosis, and metachronous if diagnosed after this point.

Statistical analyses

Overall survival (OS) and relative survival (RS) were estimated for patients diagnosed from 1977 to 2016, from time of diagnosis to time of death or censoring (due to emigration, end of follow-up, or administrative censoring at 10 years), whichever occurred first. Recurrence-free survival (RFS) was estimated for patients diagnosed from 2007 to 2016 with localized or regional disease (potentially candidates for surgery with curative intent), from time of diagnosis to time of first recurrence, death, or censoring, whichever occurred first. Survival after recurrence (SAR) was estimated from time of first recurrence to time of death or censoring, whichever occurred first. Complete follow-up on vital status was available until June 30, 2017.

Unadjusted OS and RS curves were estimated using the standard Kaplan–Meier estimator and the Pohar–Perme estimator (13, 14), comparing LCC with RCC. Cox proportional hazards regressions were used to estimate HRs for RFS, SAR, and OS. Multivariable flexible parametric regression models were used to model excess mortality due to cancer and to estimate corresponding excess HRs (eHR). A lifetable for the complete Norwegian population, stratified on sex, age (yearly intervals), and calendar year (yearly intervals), provided mortality rates necessary for estimation of RS and eHR. Regressions were adjusted for age group (0–49, 50–74, and ≥75 years), sex, stage, and morphology at diagnosis.

RS and excess mortality due to cancer are commonly used as alternatives to analyses of cancer-specific death in situations where one does not trust the information on cause of death provided in the death certificate (15). This may be of importance, particularly for older patients with cancer. As our interest lies in analyzing the effect of PTL, without potential effects of differences in other cause mortality, we did not use competing risk analyses but instead censored individuals at time of other cause death (15).

All analyses were performed using Stata (version 16.1; StataCorp LLC; RRID:SCR_012763; Supplementary Table S3). A P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

ResultsStudy population

In total, 72,224 patients were eligible for survival analysis [52.6% (n = 37,984/72,224) female]. Their median age was 72 years, 55.1% (n = 39,769/72,224) had RCC, and 10.0% (n = 7,193/72,224) had MSC adenocarcinomas. Stage distribution was 22.2% (n = 16,013/72,224) localized, 50.2% (n = 36,264/72,224) regional, 24.4% (n = 17,629/72,224) distant, and 3.2% (n = 2,318/72,224) unknown. Over the study period, there was a trend towards older age at time of diagnosis. An increasing proportion of patients were diagnosed with RCC and MSC adenocarcinomas in more recent years. The proportion of regional disease increased whereas localized disease decreased over time, however, the proportion of distant disease was relatively stable (Table 1). A total of 9.0% (n = 6,474/72,224) were excluded due to missing PTL, stage, and/or follow-up. The final study populations consisted of 65,750 and 17,796 patients for survival trend and recurrence analysis, respectively (Fig. 1).

Table 1.

Baseline characteristics of the population eligible for survival analysis.

Figure 1.Figure 1.Figure 1.

Overview of data source and extraction, and study populations.

Survival

During the first period (1977–1986), the median OS (mOS) was 3.3 [95% confidence interval (CI), 3.1–3.4] years for LCC and 3.0 (95% CI, 2.7–3.2) years for RCC (all stages). The 5-year OS was 40.9% for LCC and 40.5% for RCC (all stages). The 5-year RS was 50.9% for LCC and 51.9% for RCC (all stages). There was no significant difference between LCC and RCC in OS (HR, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.97–1.06; P = 0.581) or RS (eHR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.90–1.02; P = 0.179) when adjusting for age, sex, stage, and morphology (Table 2; Fig. 2A).

Table 2.

Unadjusted and adjusted HR and eHR comparing LCC with RCC (reference).

Figure 2.Figure 2.Figure 2.

Survival estimates for all patients stratified by four 10-year periods. Estimates of OS (solid line) and RS (dotted line) are presented for RCC (blue) versus LCC (red) in patients diagnosed during 1977–1986 (A), 1987–1996 (B), 1997–2006 (C), and 2007–2016 (D). HRs and eHRs are unadjusted, comparing LCC with RCC (reference). Numbers at risk are for OS estimates.

During the last period (2007–2016), the mOS was 7.7 (95% CI, 7.3–8.1) years for LCC and 6.3 (95% CI, 6.0–6.6) years for RCC (all stages). The 5-year OS was 59.4% for LCC and 54.4% for RCC (all stages). The 5-year RS was 70.5% for LCC and 68.2% for RCC (all stages). LCC was associated with significantly better OS (HR, 0.84; 95% CI, 0.80–0.87; P < 0.001) and RS (eHR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.72–0.81; P < 0.001) compared with RCC when adjusting for age, sex, stage, and morphology (Table 2; Fig. 2D).

The 5-year RS of colon cancer improved with time for all stages, both sexes, and all age groups. For localized disease, there was no clear difference in survival between LCC and RCC in any time period. For regional disease, LCC had a gradually diverging and significantly more favorable prognosis compared with RCC from 2007 onwards, while for distant disease this trend was evident across all time periods. For patients less than 75 years of age and in men, LCC had a gradually diverging and significantly more favorable prognosis compared with RCC from 1987, while this trend was evident for patients ≥75 years of age and in women from 1997 onwards. For non-MSC adenocarcinomas, LCC had a significantly better prognosis compared with RCC from 1987, while for patients with MSC adenocarcinomas, no clear prognostic trend was observed (Fig. 3; Supplementary Tables S4–S12).

Figure 3.Figure 3.Figure 3.

eHRs associated with PTL according to decades for all colon cancers and different subgroups. Models are estimated separately for each time period and adjusted for age group, sex, stage, and morphology. Percentages may not total 100 due to rounding.

Recurrence

During the latest period (2007–2016) there was no difference in RFS for LCC compared with RCC in patients <75 years of age with localized and regional disease (adjusted HR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.91–1.08; P = 0.819). In contrast, SAR was significantly better for patients with LCC compared with RCC (adjusted HR, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.53–0.71; P < 0.001; Fig. 4). The RFS of LCC was borderline inferior to that of RCC in patients ≥75 years of age with localized and regional disease (adjusted HR, 1.07; 95% CI, 1.00–1.15; P = 0.041). However, SAR was significantly better for LCC compared with RCC also in the elderly population (adjusted HR, 0.80; 95% CI, 0.68–0.94; P = 0.005; Fig. 4).

Figure 4.Figure 4.Figure 4.

Recurrence and survival estimates for patients diagnosed with nonmetastatic disease during 2007 to 2016. RFS is presented for RCC (blue) versus LCC (red) in patients aged 0 to 74 (A) and ≥75 (B) years. SAR is presented for RCC (blue) versus LCC (red) in patients aged 0 to 74 (C) and ≥75 (D) years. HRs are unadjusted, comparing LCC with RCC (reference).

Discussion

In this nationwide cohort study we followed more than 65,000 patients diagnosed with colon cancer across four 10-year periods, using high quality and high coverage population data. Several novel trends emerged. Firstly, during 1977 to 1986 there was no overall difference in survival between LCC and RCC, which is supported by scarce historical data suggesting that 5-year survival was close to identical prior to the mid-1980s in the United States (5) and Europe (16). Secondly, from 1987 onwards there has been a gradually diverging and significantly favorable prognosis for LCC, in line with fragmented population- and institution-based observational studies from the United States (5, 7, 17) and Europe (6, 16). A different pattern was identified in patients with MSC adenocarcinomas (mainly mucinous histologies); prognosis of RCC was superior to LCC irrespective of time period, in line with institutional and epidemiologic data previously published (18, 19). Distant LCC has rather consistently been associated with better prognosis compared with RCC (5, 6, 20). The literature is, however, conflicting with regard to nonmetastatic disease (21, 22). A meta-analysis found that patients with LCC had superior prognosis compared with RCC in stage III, whereas the associations were reversed for stage I–II (8). The reasons for discrepancies in individual studies may be due to unaccounted tumor-related factors, patient selection, or inclusion across varying time periods/treatment regimens. We found an overall shift in survival over the last 40 years favoring LCC, mainly driven by trends in patients below 75 years of age with distant and regional disease and non-MSC morphologies (Fig. 5). We argue that this shift parallels the successive implementation of treatments which have been more efficacious for patients with LCC than RCC; life-prolonging drug therapy for metastatic disease, adjuvant drug therapy for regional disease, and improved surgical interventions of metastases.

Figure 5.Figure 5.Figure 5.

Graphical abstract summarizing main survival trends comparing LCC with RCC (reference). Top right, the overall eHRs changing over time, including yearly estimates (bullets) and a locally weighted scatterplot smoothing trend line with 95% CIs. Bottom right, estimated eHR changing over time within different subgroups, including heatmaps stratified for stage, morphology, age, and sex. NA, not available; AC, adenocarcinomas. Medical art in the top left panel was adapted from Servier Medical Art by Servier, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.

Drug therapy for advanced disease was uncommon during the first study period. Yet, prognosis was better for patients with distant LCC. To our knowledge this is a novel finding, suggesting e.g., inherent differences in immunologic control disfavoring advanced/distant RCC (23). The survival gap was further accentuated throughout the following decades. In the 5-fluorouracil monotherapy era until the mid-1990s, no clinical studies prospectively investigated 5-fluorouracil efficacy across PTLs. However, retrospective data from the adjuvant setting suggest that the hypermethylation/hypermutant state of RCC may confer resistance to 5-fluorouracil (24, 25). Later, as combination chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil and irinotecan/oxaliplatin) and targeted therapy were introduced in first-line, meta-analyses confirmed the inferior prognosis of RCC (9). Some results suggest poorer responses of 5-fluorouracil–based combination therapies in patients with RCC (26), but a definite predictive role of PTL in response to combination chemotherapy has not been established (27, 28). Regarding targeted therapy, there are indications that the effect of anti-VEGF therapy is independent of PTL (29). Contrary, anti-EGFR therapy has proven more effective in RAS wild-type LCC than RCC (9, 30, 31). Therapies targeting VEGF and EGFR in first-line were gradually introduced outside of clinical trials from mid-/late-2000s, and treatment was covered for all Norwegian citizens by universal health coverage. Evidence combined; it is plausible that the combined and sequential efficacy of life-prolonging drug therapy has been increasingly biased in favor of LCC across several decades. Molecular variants associated with drug resistance and poor prognosis in advanced disease are far more prevalent on the right (18% MSI-high; 38% BRAF-mutated) compared with the left side (1% MSI-high; 14% BRAF-mutated) given real-world data (32), which may account for some of the disparities observed.

Adjuvant drug therapy was introduced as 5-fluorouracil during the mid-/late-1990s with the addition of oxaliplatin from the mid-2000s. We found a gradually diverging and significantly favorable prognosis for regional LCC compared with RCC from 2007. Data from the Adjuvant Colon Cancer Endpoints database found that adding oxaliplatin to a 5-flurouracil backbone improved survival more profoundly for LCC than RCC (33), but it is unlikely the sole explanation of the observed trend shift. We therefore investigated RFS and SAR for nonmetastatic patients during the latest study period. There were no major differences in RFS between RCC and LCC, similar to a Swedish population-based study (34). However, SAR was significantly better for patients with LCC. This suggests that today's interventions at time of recurrence (i.e., life-prolonging drug therapy and/or metastasectomy) have major impact on the survival disparity of RCC and LCC. The frequency of patients offered metastasectomy has increased during the last decade, and both metastatic pattern and patient-related factors (e.g., liver-only disease and younger age) favor interventions in patients with LCC (6, 35). Consequently, patients treated with e.g., liver resection also differ on the molecular level, with more favorable prognostic characteristics [e.g., 2% BRAF-mutated in a resected population (36) vs. 19% BRAF-mutated in a real-world metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) population (32)]. Despite this being a highly selected group of patients, a meta-analysis indicated that survival of RCC was inferior to that of LCC after treatment with surgery/ablation of liver metastases (37). Both molecular characteristics and the efficacy of perioperative systemic therapy may be important confounding factors affecting PTL outcome after locoregional treatment, warranting further investigations.

It is likely that PTL represents a proxy of the interplay between molecular (3), immunologic (38), and microbiological factors (39). Patients with RCC more often present with immune cell infiltration, a feature associated with consensus molecular subtype (CMS) 1 and MSI-high (3). Evidence suggests that there is a continuous immunoediting during the evolution of MSI-high colon carcinomas (40). MSI-high is on one hand associated with higher adaptive immunity, potential for tumor immunosurveillance and equilibrium, and hence prevention of metastatic dissemination (41). On the other hand, MSI-high has the potential of undergoing immune escape and subsequent disease progression (42, 43). Patients with CMS 1/MSI-high have a particularly poor survival after relapse, supporting the hypothesis of immune escape and suggesting poor response to conventional life-prolonging drug therapy at time of recurrence (44, 45). It has also been suggested that the microbiome shape immunesurveillance in RCC affecting efficacy of chemotherapy, programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) blockade and overall prognosis (46). A recent study investigating the effects of pembrolizumab or chemotherapy in first-line advanced MSI-high colorectal cancer suggested in subgroup progression-free survival analysis that pembrolizumab was favored in patients with RCC, whereas no significant difference was seen in LCC (47). Thus, we believe there is a need to also consider PTL when designing future treatment trials; and continue investigating the interplay between molecular, immunologic and microbiological factors across and within different anatomic locations and pathological morphologies of the colon.

Strengths

The predictive and prognostic impact of PTL has previously been examined extensively in the anti-EGFR era. However, we found no nationwide population-based study similar to ours investigating survival trends across four decades, as more effective treatment modalities have gradually been implemented. Through this study we observed an increasing survival gap disfavoring RCC, which is worrisome and requires attention by the global colorectal cancer community. We believe Norway is considered particularly suitable for this type of investigation. Firstly, Norway has one of the oldest and most complete national cancer registries in the world. Secondly, the Norwegian population is still naïve to colorectal cancer screening; no national screening program is yet established, and the effects of conducted pilot studies are expected to be negligible (48). This minimizes the risk that the observed prognostic trends are due to large-scale screening programs, which may be a potential confounder in other population-based studies (49). Finally, universal health coverage was implemented in Norway in the 1950s. This has ensured similar access to advances in oncological treatment for the whole population across decades. This minimizes the risk that the observed prognostic trends are due to inequalities in healthcare access (e.g., variations in private health insurance plans), which may confound other studies.

Limitations

Firstly, this is an observational study with potential confounders (e.g., comorbidity and molecular data). Secondly, PTL was assigned according to ICD-7 (available across all four 10-year periods) and ICDO-3 (available for the last 10-year period). This shifts PTL about 3% due to coding of the splenic flexure, but a sensitivity analysis for the last 10-year period revealed comparable results. Thirdly, we observed migration from localized to regional stage, in line with gradually improved pathology services and minor changes in CRN coding rules. Another limitation is coding of regional stage, which includes stage III and some stage II patients. Finally, multiple primaries were pragmatically excluded from the survival analyses (<10% of all cases). A sensitivity analysis including one/first primary of patients with multiple primaries revealed comparable results with that of the main analyses.

Conclusion

In summary, we found a marked trend shift in survival over the past four decades favoring LCC. This was already apparent for distant disease 40 years ago and further accentuated in the following decades; especially for patients below 75 years of age with distant and regional disease, and limited to non-MSC morphologies. We argue that this shift parallels the successive implementation of treatments which are relatively more efficacious for patients with LCC than RCC. We have further shown that RFS is similar for nonmetastatic LCC and RCC, but SAR is significantly inferior for RCC. This substantiates that PTL may be predictive of response to systemic therapy in advanced colon cancer, rather than solely being a prognostic marker. We believe there is a need to also consider PTL when designing future treatment trials. Furthermore, dedicated trial protocols should presently be prioritized for patients with MSI-high and BRAF-mutant colon cancer with the aim of closing the survival gap between RCC and LCC.

Authors' Disclosures

M.G. Guren reports grants from Norwegian Cancer Society during the conduct of the study. No disclosures were reported by the other authors.

Authors' Contributions

J. Hamfjord: Conceptualization, formal analysis, investigation, visualization, methodology, writing–original draft, writing–review and editing. T.Å. Myklebust: Conceptualization, formal analysis, investigation, visualization, methodology, writing–review and editing. I.K. Larsen: Conceptualization, investigation, methodology, writing–review and editing. E.H. Kure: Investigation, writing–review and editing. B. Glimelius: Investigation, writing–review and editing. T.K. Guren: Investigation, writing–review and editing. K.M. Tveit: Investigation, writing–review and editing. M.G. Guren: Conceptualization, supervision, investigation, methodology, writing–review and editing.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the Norwegian Cancer Society (grant number 190188-2017) to M.G. Guren. The funding organization had no role in study design; the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; the writing of the report; or in the decision to submit the paper for publication.

The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Footnotes

Note: Supplementary data for this article are available at Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention Online (http://cebp.aacrjournals.org/).

Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2022;31:342–51

Received May 4, 2021.Revision received July 3, 2021.Accepted November 23, 2021.Published first December 1, 2021.©2021 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs International 4.0 License.

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