Cause of death for elders with colorectal cancer: a real-world data analysis
Introduction
According to GLOBOCAN 2018, colorectal cancer was listed as 3rd most common cancer (6.1%), and 2nd leading cause of cancer death (9.2%) in both sexes combined (1). However, death rates of colorectal cancer declined by approximately 2% per year in the 1990s and by approximately 3% per year in the last decade (2). This is due to the improving clinical practice in cancer treatment and management in developed countries. Also, development and popularization of screening and early detection programs have profound impact (3). With more precancerous lesions found and treated under colonoscopy, more early tumors have been detected and received radical resections. As a result, the colorectal cancer prevention, treatment and surveillance are constantly changing. More targeted plans can reduce labor costs and financial input, and get more returns (4,5). However, despite of the cancer treatment, the survivorship of colorectal cancer patients also depends on many other factors, including age at diagnosis, comorbidities and society connections. Previous studies have shown that preexisting comorbidities had specific impact on survival of patients with colorectal cancer (6,7), and more than one-third of deaths would occur in individuals over 80-year-old (2). The current study is designed to find the causes of death for elderly patients with colorectal cancer and assess factors on colorectal cancer mortality and mortality of other causes among colorectal cancer patients aged over 65.
Conducting epidemiologic research on cancer survivorship is based on all-cause mortality, which means the most commonly used outcome in clinical studies for colorectal cancer is the sum of colorectal cancer-specific mortality and mortality of other causes. Assessment of outcomes for both colorectal cancer-specific mortality and mortality of other causes can assist doctors in finding prognostic indicators and picking out the most important medical care to improve patients’ survival. This study exhibited features of colorectal cancer-specific mortality and other mortality and explored the leading cause of death among colorectal cancer patients from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database.
Methods
Patient selection
Data of the current study on the patients with colorectal cancer between 2000 and 2014 was retrieved from the SEER database. Sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, the SEER database covers 26% population from 18 cancer registries of USA with both incidence and survival information of malignancies.
Information of both treatment details and clinicopathological factors were extracted. Patients over 65 years old who met the following criteria were included: (I) patients were pathologically diagnosed with colorectal cancer; (II) colorectal cancer was the only primary carcinoma. Patients with incomplete TNM staging or survival data were excluded.
Statistical analyze
The study cohorts were divided into three subgroups: (I) patients who were alive during our study period; (II) patients who died as a result of colorectal cancer-specific causes at the end of the study period; (III) patients who died of other causes. For further analysis of other-causes of death, we categorized other-cause mortality into three groups: the cardiovascular disease (CVD), pulmonary diseases including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and others.
For depicting the clinicopathological characteristics of cohorts, quantitative values and medians with interquartile ranges (IQRs) were utilized. Multivariate Cox proportional hazard regression models were constructed after univariate Cox proportional hazard regression models to determine the association between characteristic factors and survival status. Survival curves of 4 groups with different age ranges were drawn using the Kaplan-Meier method. Differences in survival were examined by the Log-rank test. Tumor stage was coded based on the UICC/AJCC TNM staging system (8th edition). The cutoff points based on age at diagnosis sprang from previous study (8).
R software for Windows (version R-3.4.3, the R Foundation for statistical computing) was performed for all statistical analyses. All statistical comparisons were two sided. And a P<0.05 was assessed as a threshold of statistical significance.
Results
A total of 136,872 patients who met the inclusion criteria were included in our cohorts. Among these patients, 74,307 individuals (54.3%) died during the study period: 45,131 (33.0%) of the study cohorts died due to colorectal cancer, while the other 29,176 (21.3%) died as a result of other causes. Among them, 14,489 patients died of CVD and 2,413 died of COPD or other pulmonary diseases. The median follow-up time was 37 months (IQR: 13–74), and the median age at death was 79 years old (IQR: 72–84). Generally, colorectal cancer still accounted for the most cases of deaths while patients with tumor of Grade I or TNM stage I-II were more likely to die from non-tumorous causes (Table 1).
Full table
Both the age-adjusted relative hazards ratio (HR) of death induced by colorectal cancer and other causes were greater among patients with advanced age, male patients, treatment with chemoradiotherapy and higher TNM stage (Table 2). After adjustment for age, TNM stage, histopathologic grade, tumor site and therapeutic schemes, HR of colorectal cancer-specific mortality was different from mortality of other-causes. Age, gender, tumor site, chemotherapy, tumor characteristics of grade and TNM stage affected both types of mortality, while race only affected mortality of other-causes.
Full table
The proportion of different causes of death was various by age and tumor stages (Figure 1). Patients suffered from tumor with higher stages were much more likely to die as a result of colorectal cancer instead of other causes. On the other hand, other causes of death happened more likely among patients with stage I-II cancers. In subgroups of different age ranges, CVD accounted for the highest proportion of deaths among patients diagnosed with stage I colorectal cancer. CVD was also the second leading cause of deaths for patients with stage II-IV colorectal cancer. Within all stages, there was increasing proportion of other-causes deaths as patients aged.
The proportion of cumulative causes of death was also dependent on the length of follow-up time. With longer follow-up, the proportion of deaths due to colorectal cancer decreased while deaths of CVD, pulmonary diseases and other causes of death increased continuously (Figure 2). The other causes of death in this category included deaths caused by Alzheimer’s disease (n=1,498, 1.09%) and diabetes (n=1,081, 0.79%).
Discussion
In our clinical practice, more and more elderly patients with colorectal cancer receive surgery and/or chemoradiotherapy. In the meantime, they are more likely to have comorbidities, such as CVD, pulmonary disease (such as COPD and influenza), making treatment riskier (9). According to scientific statistics, age is an independent prognostic factor for both in-hospital morbidity and mortality after colorectal surgery (10,11). As a result, we always hold a negative attitude towards the treatment of colorectal cancer in elderly patients (12). In clinical practice, we prefer give up surgery or decrease chemotherapy dose, because we have a traditional idea that elderly patients may not die from colorectal cancer but from comorbidities. However, in our cohort, we found only patients with early grade tumor, and early stage were more likely to die as a result of other causes, while colorectal cancer still accounted for most deaths in elderly patients. Therefore, we advocate active anti-tumor therapy for elderly patients with colorectal cancer.
Patients with early grade tumor and early stage were more likely to die as a result of other causes. For these patients, in addition to anti-tumor therapy, we should put more attention on diseases of other causes, such as CVD, COPD and other lung diseases. In our study, CVD was exhibited as the second leading cause of death in our cohorts (n=14,489, 10.59%), second only to colorectal cancer (n=45,131, 32.97%). And especially in patients with stage I colorectal cancer, CVD was the primary cause of death. This is because patients over 65 have a higher incidence of comorbidities and patients with comorbidities are more likely to die as a result of other causes. When patients survive longer, CVD may become the leading cause of death.
In both HR of colorectal cancer mortality and other-cause mortality, men are significantly more at risk than women. This can be explained by several reasons. First, estrogen has a protective effect on colorectal cancer in women, and women have a 7–8 years lag in developing colorectal cancer (13). Second, when it comes to lifestyle and health, women are undoubtedly superior to men in general. Smoking and drinking are still bad habits that many male patients with colorectal cancer can’t get rid of. Third, in both east and west, men are still generally given more responsibility than women. Together with the society’s ‘definition’ of male roles, men still tend to be more aggressive and endure problems even if they cannot hold on. These are not only bad for their physical and mental health, but also bad for early detection and diagnosis.
Ethnic differences also often affect treatment decision. Generally, white patients have relative low hazards of colorectal cancer deaths than black patients. However, for other causes of deaths, there was no statistical difference between these two races. Since colorectal cancer incidence and mortality are declining over the past decades owing to the adoption of effective screening programs (14), we call for more attention to colorectal cancer screening in black people so as to eliminate the difference in mortality.
In terms of tumor site, we can see that the survival of left colon cancer is slightly worse than that of right colon cancer in terms of both colorectal cancer death and other-causes death. This is contrary to other literature, which advocates that due to differences in embryo origin, anatomical structure and physiological function, right colon cancer may have worse biological behavior (15). However, other studies also have shown no significant difference in overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) after surgery for left and right colon cancer, and the OS and DFS for early right colon cancer are higher than those for left colon cancer (15). Since stage IV patients accounted for only a small portion of our study cohort, it is reasonable to believe that the survival of patients with right colon cancer may be better than those with left colon cancer.
In HR of colorectal cancer mortality, we found that in age-adjusted model, chemoradiotherapy is a risk factor for colorectal cancer death. However, after fully adjusted by age, tumor stage, grade, site and treatments, chemoradiotherapy becomes a protective factor for colorectal cancer death. This can be explained by the fact that for all patients, chemoradiotherapy often involves patients with late stage and poorly differentiated tumors, so chemoradiotherapy is a risk factor; but after adjusted by all factors, for patients with the same stage and characteristics, chemoradiotherapy offers a better survival than denying it.
Tumor grade is a risk factor for colorectal cancer death, but not influence the other cause of death. However, TNM staging is a risk factor for both colorectal cancer death and other cause of death. This is because the severity of colorectal cancer will also affect non-neoplastic diseases, especially for patients with metastasis who need intense chemoradiotherapy, etc. The side effects of chemoradiotherapy will also increase the prevalence of comorbidities.
Of course, our study is more or less imperfect, which is limited by the validity of death coding. The validity of cause-of-death confirmation is not entirely accurate, which has been found to vary in different cancer site, time of diagnosis and ages at death (16). Also, the Framingham Heart Study (17) have shown that heart disease may be over-evaluated in objective diagnosis for the cause of death generally. So, the rates of CVD may be overestimated in this study population diagnosed with colorectal cancer. In addition, there are a number of inevitably missing records for race, grade and surgery status. This information may influence the conclusion of our study. In conclusion, colorectal cancer still accounts for most deaths in elderly patients. However, elderly patients are associated with increasing risk of mortality from other comorbidities, especially CVD and pulmonary diseases. Patients with Grade I tumor and TNM stage I-II were more likely to die as a result of other causes rather than colorectal cancer. As survival time increases, deaths due to colorectal cancer decrease while deaths of CVD, pulmonary diseases increase. As a result, we should still launch active anti-tumor therapy for elderly patients with colorectal cancer, but for early stage tumors and as patients live longer, treatment of other existing comorbidities should also be considered into the schedule of patients’ management. Especially among colorectal cancer survivors over 65, proper management of CVD/COPD may improve patients’ OS.
Acknowledgments
Funding: None.
Footnote
Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/jgo.2020.03.04). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.
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