Peri-operative blood transfusion for resected colon cancer: Practice patterns and outcomes in a population-based study

•28% of resected colon cancer patients received a transfusion.•Transfusion is associated with age, female sex, advanced disease and open resection.•Transfusion is associated with worse overall survival and cancer specific survival. Literature suggests that peri-operative blood transfusion among pati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer epidemiology 2017-12, Vol.51, p.35-40
Hauptverfasser: Patel, Sunil V., Brennan, Kelly E., Nanji, Sulaiman, Karim, Safiya, Merchant, Shaila, Booth, Christopher M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•28% of resected colon cancer patients received a transfusion.•Transfusion is associated with age, female sex, advanced disease and open resection.•Transfusion is associated with worse overall survival and cancer specific survival. Literature suggests that peri-operative blood transfusion among patients with resected colon cancer may be associated with inferior long-term survival. The study objective was to characterize this association in our population. This is a retrospective cohort study using the population-based Ontario Cancer Registry (2002–2008). Pathology reports were obtained for a 25% random sample of all cases and constituted the study population. Log binomial regression was used to identify factors associated with transfusion. Cox proportional hazards model explored the association between transfusion and cancer specific survival (CSS) and overall survival (OS). The study population included 7198 patients: 18% stage I, 36% stage II, 40% stage III, and 6% stage IV. Twenty-eight percent of patients were transfused. Factors independently associated with transfusion included advanced age (p
ISSN:1877-7821
1877-783X
DOI:10.1016/j.canep.2017.10.006