Background and objective: Adjuvant chemotherapy has become a standard postoperative treatment for stage III and high risk stage II colorectal carcinoma patients. However, only a few patients can finish 6-month adjuvant chemotherapy. This study was to find out whether the duration of adjuvant chemotherapy would affect the 3-year disease-free survival.
Methods: Clinical data of 276 colorectal carcinoma patients, receiving at least two cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy including xeloda, 5-fluorouracil/calcium folinate (5-FU/CF) or Tegafur with or without oxaliplatin after radical operation in Sun Yat-sen University Cancer Center from April, 2003 to December, 2007, were analyzed for the impact of adjuvant chemotherapy duration on the 3-year disease-free survival.
Results: Of the 276 patients, 216 received chemotherapy including oxaliplatin, 60 received xeloda, 5-FU/CF or tegafur as adjuvant chemotherapy. Of the 216 patients, only 49 finished the 6-month adjuvant chemotherapy. Both univariate and multivariate analyses showed that chemotherapy duration (P=0.032), sex (P=0.001), N stage (P=0.002), and pathologic differentiation (P=0.043) were independent prognosis factors for 3-year disease-free survival.
Conclusion: Duration of adjuvant chemotherapy is an independent prognosis factor for 3-year disease-free survival of colorectal carcinoma patients.