Risk factors, histopathological landscape, biomarkers, treatment patterns and survival of early-onset colorectal cancer: A narrative review.
Celine GarrettDaniel SteffensStephen P AcklandMichael SolomonCherry KohPublished in: Asia-Pacific journal of clinical oncology (2024)
Early-onset colorectal cancer (EOCRC) incidence has increased in most Western countries over the last decade, with Australia at the forefront. Recent literature has thus focused on characterizing EOCRC from later-onset colorectal cancer (LOCRC). Earlier exposure to modifiable risk factors resulting in gut dysbiosis has been linked with EOCRC development. EOCRCs have more aggressive histopathological features with somatic mutations resulting in pro-inflammatory tumor microenvironments. There is a tendency to treat EOCRCs with multimodal chemotherapeutic regimens and more extensive surgery than LOCRCs with conflicting postoperative outcomes and survival data. Current research is limited by a lack of Australasian studies, retrospective study designs, and heterogeneous definitions of EOCRC. Future research should address these and focus on investigating the role of immunotherapies, establishing minimally invasive diagnostic biomarkers and nomograms, and evaluating the survival and functional outcomes of EOCRC.
Keyphrases
- early onset
- risk factors
- minimally invasive
- late onset
- free survival
- patients undergoing
- south africa
- type diabetes
- coronary artery bypass
- adipose tissue
- gene expression
- copy number
- dna methylation
- robot assisted
- combination therapy
- artificial intelligence
- genome wide
- chronic pain
- acute coronary syndrome
- deep learning
- coronary artery disease