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Colorectal cancer surgery in elderly and frail patients: Should we leave someone behind?

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European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology 📖 저널 OA 10.7% 2021: 0/5 OA 2022: 0/4 OA 2023: 0/7 OA 2024: 0/20 OA 2025: 7/146 OA 2026: 31/140 OA 2021~2026 2026 Vol.52(3) p. 111406
Retraction 확인
출처

PICO 자동 추출 (휴리스틱, conf 3/4)

유사 논문
P · Population 대상 환자/모집단
115 patients (11.
I · Intervention 중재 / 시술
surgery, while 74 (mostly moderate-to-severe) received non-operative care
C · Comparison 대조 / 비교
추출되지 않음
O · Outcome 결과 / 결론
Mildly frail patients, when optimized, can achieve outcomes comparable to non-frail individuals, while moderate-to-severe frailty often precludes surgery. Routine frailty stratification should inform individualized decisions and guide future trials in severely frail patients.

Granados-Maturano A, Garcia-Nalda A, Pallisera-Lloveras A, Pujol-Caballe G, Comet-Monte R, Serra-Aracil X

📝 환자 설명용 한 줄

[BACKGROUND] Frailty is a stronger determinant of surgical outcomes in colorectal cancer (CRC) than chronological age.

🔬 핵심 임상 통계 (초록에서 자동 추출 — 원문 검증 권장)
  • 표본수 (n) 913
  • p-value p = 0.018
  • p-value p < 0.001
  • 95% CI 2.8-6.3

이 논문을 인용하기

↓ .bib ↓ .ris
APA Granados-Maturano A, Garcia-Nalda A, et al. (2026). Colorectal cancer surgery in elderly and frail patients: Should we leave someone behind?. European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology, 52(3), 111406. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejso.2026.111406
MLA Granados-Maturano A, et al.. "Colorectal cancer surgery in elderly and frail patients: Should we leave someone behind?." European journal of surgical oncology : the journal of the European Society of Surgical Oncology and the British Association of Surgical Oncology, vol. 52, no. 3, 2026, pp. 111406.
PMID 41616427 ↗

Abstract

[BACKGROUND] Frailty is a stronger determinant of surgical outcomes in colorectal cancer (CRC) than chronological age. Yet frail patients are often excluded from studies, and their long-term outcomes remain poorly defined. Most research dichotomizes patients as frail or non-frail, leaving the gradation of frailty (mild, moderate, severe) underexplored.

[METHODS] Prospective, single-center study (2017-2023) including 1028 consecutive CRC patients evaluated for curative treatment. Frailty was screened with PRISMA-7 and stratified using the IF-VIG index. Allocation to surgery or non-operative care followed multidisciplinary assessment. Primary outcomes were 30-day morbidity and mortality; secondary outcomes included length of stay, readmission, and survival.

[RESULTS] Frailty was identified in 115 patients (11.2 %): 38 mild, 26 moderate, and 9 severe. Forty-one frail patients (mainly mild) underwent surgery, while 74 (mostly moderate-to-severe) received non-operative care. Compared with non-frail surgical patients (n = 913), frail patients had similar surgical complication rates (22.7 % vs 21.6 %) and no 30-day mortality, but longer stays (median 9.2 vs 6.8 days; p = 0.018), more medical complications (14.6 % vs 6.6 %; p < 0.001), and higher readmission (15.9 %). At 45 months, mortality was higher in frail surgical patients (69 % vs 19 %; HR 4.2, 95 % CI 2.8-6.3). Within the frail cohort, surgery improved survival over non-operative care (HR 0.62, 95 % CI 0.41-0.95).

[CONCLUSIONS] Stratifying frailty into mild, moderate, and severe provides practical guidance for CRC management. Mildly frail patients, when optimized, can achieve outcomes comparable to non-frail individuals, while moderate-to-severe frailty often precludes surgery. Routine frailty stratification should inform individualized decisions and guide future trials in severely frail patients.

🏷️ 키워드 / MeSH 📖 같은 키워드 OA만

🏷️ 같은 키워드 · 무료전문 — 이 논문 MeSH/keyword 기반