immunoscore clinical colon cancer stage ii pa …...background results risk of relapse assessment...

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Results Background Risk of relapse assessment and survival predicon In the internaonal validaon (Pagès et al. Lancet 2018), of all clinical parameters, the relave contribuon to the risk showed that Immunoscore (47%) was beer than TNM staging (28%), grade of dierenaon (15%), VELIPI (8%), sex (<3%), mucinous, and MSI status. Immunoscore was stronger than all these clinical parameters, showing the highest contribu�on to predict survival: Method Analyses of Immunoscore (High/Low) using pre-dened cut-os, blinded to clinical outcome: Kaplan-Meier analyses for 5Y TTR were performed on St II subgroups (see Paents Characteriscs) from the Immunoscore internaonal validaon study (Pagès et al. Lancet 2018). Paents were classified in 2 categories using pre-defined cutos: Low Immunoscore (0-1) vs High Immunoscore (2-3-4). Introducon Risk assessment is parcularly important to decide when to propose an adjuvant treatment for Stage (St) II CC paents. High-risk St II paents defined as those with poor prognos c features (T4, lymph nodes sampling <12, poor dierenaon, VELIPI, bowel obstrucon or perforaon) can be considered for adjuvant chemotherapy Immunoscore® is an IVD test predic�ng the risk of relapse in early-stage Colon Cancer (CC) paents, by measuring the host immune response at the tumor site. It is a risk-assessment tool providing independent and superior prognos c value than the usual tumor risk parameters and is intended to be used as an adjunct to the TNM classicaon. In the present study, we invesgated Immunoscore clinical performance within subgroups of the St II paents included in the internaonal SITC-led validaon study (Pagès et al. Lancet 2018), in parcular to idenfy pa�ents who could be spared chemotherapy. Conclusions Among High-risk untreated St II paents: 69.5% had a High Immunoscore with 5Y TTR of 87.4% (95% CI 83.9-91.0), signicantly superior to the 5Y TTR of the Low Immunoscore paents (72.2% (95% CI 65.6-79.6)) (p<0.00001) Among untreated St II pa�ents: the 5Y TTR observed in the High Immunoscore High-risk group (87.4%) is stascally similar to the 5Y TTR observed in the Low-risk group: 89.1% (95% CI 86.1-92.1) (p=0.42) Within High-risk St II paents, 5Y TTR in paents with a High Immunoscore is similar in untreated paents and paents who received adjuvant chemotherapy (5Y TTR of 83.4 (95% CI 77.6-89.9)) (p=0.37) Despite the presence of high-risk clinico-pathological features that usually trigger adjuvant treatment, when not treated with chemotherapy, this retrospecve study indicates that a signicant part of these paents (69.5%) with high-Immunoscore, had a recurrence risk similar to the untreated low risk paents. This study reinforces Immunoscore clinical u�lity to guide adjuvant treatment decisions in Stage II paents. References Pagès F, Mlecnik B, Marliot F et al. Internaonal validaon of the consensus Immunoscore for the classicaon of colon cancer: a prognosc and accuracy study. Lancet. 2018; 391 (10135) Sinicrope F, Shi Q, Hermie F et al. Immunoscore to provide prognosc informaon in low- (T1-3N1) and high-risk (T4 or N2) subsets of stage III colon carcinoma paents treated with adjuvant FOLFOX in a phase III trial (NCCTG N0147; Alliance). J Clin Oncol. 2018; 36:4s (suppl; abstr 614) Sinicrope F, Shi Q, Hermie F et al. Associa�on of immune markers and Immunoscore with survival of stage III colon carcinoma (CC) paents (pts) treated with adjuvant FOLFOX: NCCTG N0147 (Alliance). J Clin Oncol. 2017; 35:15s (suppl; abstr 3579) Nitsche U, Stöss C, Friess H. E ect of Adjuvant Chemotherapy on Elderly Colorectal Cancer Paents: Lack of Evidence. Gastrointest Tumors. 2017; 4(1-2) Mlecnik B, Bindea G, Angell HK et al. Integrave Analyses of Colorectal Cancer Show Immunoscore Is a Stronger Predictor of Paent Survival Than Microsatellite Instability. Immunity.2016;15;44(3) Pagès et al. Lancet 2018 Paents characteris cs Ini�al cohort: n= 2267 colon cancer pa�ents (Stage I/II/III), pre-defined Immunoscore cut- os ( Pagès et al. Lancet 2018) Pa�ents were considered High-risk Stage II if they had at least 1 of the following clinico-pathological high-risk features: Test principle Immune Infiltrate CD3+ and CD8+ cell density Predicve of risk of relapse * IS Low IS Intermediate IS High IS 2 IS 0 IS 1 IS 3 IS 4 * Based on the internaonal Immunoscore SITC study results (2681 CC pa�ents samples) Pagès et al. Lancet 2018. Immunoscore CD3 CD3 CD3 CD8 CD8 CD8 High-risk Medium risk Low-risk Jérôme Galon 1 , Fabienne Hermie 2 , Bernhard Mlecnik 3 , Florence Marliot 1,4 , Carlo Bifulco 5 , Alessandro Lugli 6 , Iris D Nagtegaal 7 , Arndt Hartmann 8 , Marc Van den Eynde 9 , Michael H A Roehrl 10 , Pamela S Ohashi 11 , Eva Zavadova 12 , Toshihiko Torigoe 13 , Prabhu S Patel 14 , Yili Wang 15 , Yutaka Kawakami 16 , Francesco M Marincola 17 , Paolo A Ascierto 18 , Bernard A Fox 19 , Franck Pagès 1,4 1- INSERM, Laboratory of Integrave Cancer Immunology, Sorbonne Université, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Université Paris Descartes, Université Paris Diderot; Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Paris, FR | 2- R&D, HalioDx, Marseille, FR | 3- Inovarion, Paris, FR | 4- Laboratory of Immunology, AP-HP, Georges Pompidou European Hospital, Paris, FR | 5- Department of Pathology, Providence Portland Medical Center, Portland, OR, US | 6- Ins tute of Pathology, University of Bern, Bern, CH | 7- Pathology, Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen, Nijmegen, NL | 8- Department of Surgery,University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, DE | 9- Department of Medical Oncology, Cliniques Universitaires St. Luc, Brussels, BE | 10- Department of Pathology, Memorial Sloan Keering Cancer Center, New-York, NY, US | 11- Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, CA | 12- Pathology, General Faculty Hospital, VFN Charles University, Prague, CZ| 13- Department of Pathology, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, JP | 14- Cancer Biology, The Gujarat Cancer & Research Ins tute, Ahmedabad, IN | 15- Ins tute for Cancer Research, School of Basic Medical Science, Department of Pathology of the First Affiliated Hospital, Health Science Center of Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xian, CN | 16- Division of Cellular Signaling, Ins tute for Advanced Medical Research, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, JP | 17- Immune oncology discovery, AbbVie Inc., Redwood City, CA, US | 18- Melanoma, Cancer Immunotherapy and Innovave Therapy Unit, Is tuto Nazionale Tumori – I.R.C.C.S - Fondazione Pascale, Napoli, IT | 19- Laboratory of Molecular and Tumor Immunology, Earle A. Chiles Research Ins tute at the Robert W. Franz Cancer Center, Portland, US. Immunoscore clinical u�lity to iden fy good prognos �c Colon Cancer Stage II pa �ents with high-risk clinico-pathological features for whom adjuvant treatment may be avoided Gastrointes�nal Cancers Symposium 2019 T4 tumors Lymph nodes sampling <12 Poorly dierenated tumor Lymphac/vascular or perineural invasion Bowel obstrucon or perforaon High-risk stage II Low-Immunoscore High-Immunoscore Colon cancer paents Surgery Immuno-pathology : Immunoscore I-TNM classicaon High-Immunoscore ≥70+ years Chemotherapy recommenda�on Consider Avoiding Consider Avoiding (possibly detrimental) Consider Tradional risk assessment Immunoscore Copies of this poster obtained through Quick Response (QR) Code are for personal use only and may not be reproduced without permission from ASCO® and the author of this poster Time to recurrence in High-Risk Stage II CC paents based on Immunoscore Stage II untreated (no chemotherapy) paents High-risk Stage II paents (based on clinico-pathological high-risk features) but with High-Immunoscore have good clinical outcome (similar to Low-risk paents) Among the pa�ents with high-risk features (n=630), 438 (69.5%) had a High Immunoscore with a corresponding 5Y TTR of 87.4 (95% CI 83.9- 91.0), stas cally similar (logrank pv not stra�fied p>0.42, wald pv stra�fied by center p>0.20) to the TTR 89.1 (95% CI 86.1-92.1) observed for the 500 Low-risk pa�ents (with no clinico-pathological feature). Time to recurrence in Stage II CC paents based on Immunoscore and chemotherapy Stage II paents 70 years, chemo vs no chemo In this cohort, 5Y TTR in St II paents 70 years with High Immunoscore who did not receive chemotherapy was beer than in those who received chemotherapy. Within St II paents with high-risk features, 5Y TTR in paents with a High Immunoscore is similar in untreated paents (n=438) and paents who received adjuvant chemotherapy (n=162) (5Y TTR of 83.4 (95% CI 77.6-89.9)) (p=0.37). TTR according to the clinico-pathological risk categories (High Risk vs Low Risk) and Immunoscore (IS 0-1 vs IS 2-3-4) in untreated Stage II colon cancer paents (n=1130) TTR according to administraon of adjuvant chemotherapy (Chemo vs No Chemo) and to the Immunoscore (IS 0-1 vs IS 2-3-4) in High-risk Stage II colon cancer pa�ents (n=874) TTR according to administraon of adjuvant chemotherapy (Chemo vs No Chemo) and to the Immunoscore (IS 0-1 vs IS 2-3-4) in elderly Stage II colon cancer paents (all risk categories n=679) Relave importance of each risk parameter to survival risk using the χ² propor�on test for clinical parameters plus Immunoscore in Stage II paents with high-risk feature(s) (n=286 (data available on MSI status and other clinico-pathological parameters)) Treatment decisions in High-Risk St II colon cancer paents No randomized trial has been conducted to demonstrate a potenal benefit of chemotherapy to High-risk Stage II Colon Cancer pa�ents. However, High-risk Stage II paents defined as those with poor prognos �c clinico- pathologic features are typically considered for adjuvant chemotherapy. These risk features are imperfect and addi�onal risk factors are needed to guide treatment decisions. Treatment decisions in St II Elderly paents The median age at the me of CRC diagnosis is 68 years However, clinical studies that evaluated the eect of adjuvant treatment regimens have a selecon bias in favor of younger pa�ents The benefit of adjuvant treatment in the elderly pa�ents is s�ll unclear Fig. 1 Fig. 2 Fig. 4 Fig. 3 High-risk Stage II paents, chemo vs no chemo Subgroups: Stage II colon cancer untreated pa�ents (no chemotherapy) : n= 1130 Low-risk untreated Stage II pa�ents: n=500 High-risk untreated Stage II pa�ents: n=630 Stage II High-risk: n=874 (chemo n=244 vs no chemo n=630) Stage II elderly pa�ents 70 years, all risk categories (n=679) Immunoscore shows the highest contribu�on to predict survival (60%, stronger than all the other parameters). Low-Risk Paents: 50/500 (44.25%) 5Y: 89.1 (86.1-92.1) 0 2 0 4 0 6 0 8 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Time to recurrence (Years) P aents without e v ent (%) Low-Risk High-Risk IS 0-1 High-Risk IS 2-3-4 High-Risk IS 0-1 Paents: 49/192 (16.99%) 5Y: 72.2 (65.6-79.6) High-Risk IS 2-3-4 Paents: 49/438 (38.76%) 5Y: 87.4 (83.9-91) NO CHEMO IS 0-1 NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4 CHEMO IS 0-1 CHEMO IS 2-3-4 NO CHEMO IS 0-1 Paents: 33/145 (21.35%) 3Y: 79 (72.1−86.6) NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Paents: 44/454 (66.86%) 3Y: 90.6 (87.6−93.7) CHEMO IS 0-1 Paents: 6/29 (4.27%) 3Y: 78.7 (64.9−95.4) CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Paents: 11/51 (7.51%) 3Y: 78.5 (67.5−91.3) 0 2 0 4 0 6 0 8 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Time to recurrence (Years) P aents without e v ent (%) NO CHEMO IS 0-1 NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4 CHEMO IS 0-1 CHEMO IS 2-3-4 NO CHEMO IS 0-1 Paents: 49/192 (21.97%) 5Y: 72.2 (65.6−79.6) NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Paents: 49/438 (50.11%) 5Y: 87.4 (83.9−91) CHEMO IS 0-1 Paents: 20/82 (9.38%) 5Y: 73.6 (64.3−84.2) CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Paents: 24/162 (18.54%) 5Y: 83.4 (77.6−89.8) 0 2 0 4 0 6 0 8 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Time to recurrence (Years) P aents without e v ent (%)

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ResultsBackgroundRisk of relapse assessment and survival predic�onIn the interna�onal valida�on (Pagès et al. Lancet 2018), of all clinical parameters, therela�ve contribu�on to the risk showed that Immunoscore (47%) was be�er than TNMstaging (28%), grade of differen�a�on (15%), VELIPI (8%), sex (<3%), mucinous, and MSIstatus. Immunoscore was stronger than all these clinical parameters, showing the highestcontribu�on to predict survival:

MethodAnalyses of Immunoscore (High/Low) using pre-defined cut-offs, blinded to clinicaloutcome:Kaplan-Meier analyses for 5Y TTR were performed on St II subgroups (see Pa�entsCharacteris�cs) from the Immunoscore interna�onal valida�on study (Pagès et al. Lancet2018).

Pa�ents were classified in 2 categories using pre-defined cutoffs: Low Immunoscore (0-1) vsHigh Immunoscore (2-3-4).

Introduc�onRisk assessment is par�cularly important to decide when to propose an adjuvant treatmentfor Stage (St) II CC pa�ents. High-risk St II pa�ents defined as those with poor prognos�cfeatures (T4, lymph nodes sampling <12, poor differen�a�on, VELIPI, bowel obstruc�on orperfora�on) can be considered for adjuvant chemotherapyImmunoscore® is an IVD test predic�ng the risk of relapse in early-stage Colon Cancer (CC)pa�ents, by measuring the host immune response at the tumor site. It is a risk-assessmenttool providing independent and superior prognos�c value than the usual tumor riskparameters and is intended to be used as an adjunct to the TNM classifica�on.In the present study, we inves�gated Immunoscore clinical performance within subgroups ofthe St II pa�ents included in the interna�onal SITC-led valida�on study (Pagès et al. Lancet2018), in par�cular to iden�fy pa�ents who could be spared chemotherapy.

Conclusions• Among High-risk untreated St II pa�ents: 69.5% had a High Immunoscore

with 5Y TTR of 87.4% (95% CI 83.9-91.0), significantly superior to the 5YTTR of the Low Immunoscore pa�ents (72.2% (95% CI 65.6-79.6))(p<0.00001)

• Among untreated St II pa�ents: the 5Y TTR observed in the HighImmunoscore High-risk group (87.4%) is sta�s�cally similar to the 5Y TTRobserved in the Low-risk group: 89.1% (95% CI 86.1-92.1) (p=0.42)

• Within High-risk St II pa�ents, 5Y TTR in pa�ents with a High Immunoscoreis similar in untreated pa�ents and pa�ents who received adjuvantchemotherapy (5Y TTR of 83.4 (95% CI 77.6-89.9)) (p=0.37)

Despite the presence of high-risk clinico-pathological features that usuallytrigger adjuvant treatment, when not treated with chemotherapy, thisretrospec�ve study indicates that a significant part of these pa�ents (69.5%)with high-Immunoscore, had a recurrence risk similar to the untreated lowrisk pa�ents.

This study reinforces Immunoscore clinical u�lity to guide adjuvanttreatment decisions in Stage II pa�ents.

References• Pagès F, Mlecnik B, Marliot F et al. Interna�onal valida�on of the consensus Immunoscore for the

classifica�on of colon cancer: a prognos�c and accuracy study. Lancet. 2018; 391 (10135)

• Sinicrope F, Shi Q, Hermitte F et al. Immunoscore to provide prognos�c informa�on in low- (T1-3N1)and high-risk (T4 or N2) subsets of stage III colon carcinoma pa�ents treated with adjuvant FOLFOX ina phase III trial (NCCTG N0147; Alliance). J Clin Oncol. 2018; 36:4s (suppl; abstr 614)

• Sinicrope F, Shi Q, Hermitte F et al. Associa�on of immune markers and Immunoscore with survival ofstage III colon carcinoma (CC) pa�ents (pts) treated with adjuvant FOLFOX: NCCTG N0147 (Alliance).J Clin Oncol. 2017; 35:15s (suppl; abstr 3579)

• Nitsche U, Stöss C, Friess H. Effect of Adjuvant Chemotherapy on Elderly Colorectal Cancer Pa�ents:Lack of Evidence. Gastrointest Tumors. 2017; 4(1-2)

• Mlecnik B, Bindea G, Angell HK et al. Integra�ve Analyses of Colorectal Cancer Show Immunoscore Isa Stronger Predictor of Pa�ent Survival Than Microsatellite Instability. Immunity.2016;15;44(3)

Pagès et al. Lancet 2018

Pa�ents characteris�csIni�al cohort: n= 2267 colon cancer pa�ents (Stage I/II/III), pre-defined Immunoscore cut-offs (Pagès et al. Lancet 2018)

Pa�ents were considered High-risk Stage II if they had at least 1 of the following clinico-pathological high-risk features:

Test principle

Immune InfiltrateCD3+ and CD8+ cell

density

Predic�ve of risk of relapse *

IS Low IS Intermediate IS High

IS 2IS 0 IS 1 IS 3 IS 4

* Based on the interna�onal Immunoscore SITC study results (2681 CC pa�ents samples) Pagès et al. Lancet 2018.

Immunoscore

CD3 CD3 CD3CD8 CD8CD8

High-risk Medium risk Low-risk

Jérôme Galon1, Fabienne Hermi�e2, Bernhard Mlecnik3, Florence Marliot1,4, Carlo Bifulco5, Alessandro Lugli6, Iris D Nagtegaal7, Arndt Hartmann8, Marc Van den Eynde9, Michael H A Roehrl10, Pamela S Ohashi11, Eva Zavadova12, Toshihiko Torigoe13, Prabhu S Patel14, Yili Wang15, Yutaka Kawakami16, Francesco M Marincola17, Paolo A Ascierto18, Bernard A Fox19, Franck Pagès1,4

1- INSERM, Laboratory of Integra�ve Cancer Immunology, Sorbonne Université, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Université Paris Descartes, Université Paris Diderot; Centre de Recherche des Cordeliers, Paris, FR | 2- R&D, HalioDx, Marseille, FR | 3- Inovarion, Paris, FR | 4- Laboratory of Immunology, AP-HP, Georges Pompidou European Hospital, Paris, FR | 5- Department of Pathology, Providence Portland Medical Center, Portland, OR, US | 6- Ins�tute of Pathology, University of Bern, Bern, CH | 7- Pathology, Radboud University Medical Centre Nijmegen, Nijmegen, NL | 8- Department of Surgery,University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, DE | 9- Department of Medical Oncology, Cliniques Universitaires St. Luc, Brussels, BE | 10- Department of Pathology, Memorial Sloan Ke�ering Cancer Center, New-York, NY, US | 11- Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, CA | 12- Pathology, General Faculty Hospital, VFN Charles University, Prague, CZ| 13- Department of Pathology, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Sapporo, JP | 14- Cancer Biology, The Gujarat Cancer & Research Ins�tute, Ahmedabad, IN | 15- Ins�tute for Cancer Research, School of Basic Medical Science, Department of Pathology of the First Affiliated Hospital, Health Science Center of Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xian, CN | 16- Division of Cellular Signaling, Ins�tute for Advanced Medical Research, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, JP | 17- Immune oncology discovery, AbbVie Inc., Redwood City, CA, US | 18- Melanoma, Cancer Immunotherapy and Innova�ve TherapyUnit, Is�tuto Nazionale Tumori – I.R.C.C.S - Fondazione Pascale, Napoli, IT | 19- Laboratory of Molecular and Tumor Immunology, Earle A. Chiles Research Ins�tute at the Robert W. Franz Cancer Center, Portland, US.

Immunoscore clinical u�lity to iden�fy good prognos�c Colon Cancer Stage II pa�ents with high-risk clinico-pathological features for whom adjuvant treatment may be avoided

Gastrointes�nal Cancers Symposium 2019

T4 tumors Lymph nodes sampling <12 Poorly differen�ated tumor Lympha�c/vascular or perineural

invasion Bowel obstruc�on or perfora�on

High-risk stage II

Low-Immunoscore High-Immunoscore

Colon cancer pa�ents

Surgery Immuno-pathology : Immunoscore I-TNM classifica�on

High-Immunoscore

≥70+ years

Chemotherapy recommenda�on

Consider Avoiding

Consider Avoiding(possibly detrimental)

Consider

Tradi�onal risk assessment

Immunoscore

Copies of this poster obtained through Quick Response (QR) Code are for personal use only and may

not be reproduced without permission from ASCO® and the

author of this poster

Time to recurrence in High-Risk Stage II CC pa�ents based on ImmunoscoreStage II untreated (no chemotherapy) pa�ents

High-risk Stage II pa�ents (based on clinico-pathological high-risk features) but with High-Immunoscore have good clinical outcome (similar to Low-risk pa�ents)

Among the pa�ents with high-risk features (n=630), 438 (69.5%) had aHigh Immunoscore with a corresponding 5Y TTR of 87.4 (95% CI 83.9-91.0), sta�s�cally similar (logrank pv not stra�fied p>0.42, wald pvstra�fied by center p>0.20) to the TTR 89.1 (95% CI 86.1-92.1)observed for the 500 Low-risk pa�ents (with no clinico-pathologicalfeature).

Time to recurrence in Stage II CC pa�ents based on Immunoscore and chemotherapyStage II pa�ents ≥ 70 years, chemo vs no chemo

In this cohort, 5Y TTR in St II pa�ents ≥ 70 years with HighImmunoscore who did not receive chemotherapy was be�er thanin those who received chemotherapy.

Within St II pa�ents with high-risk features, 5Y TTR in pa�ents with a High Immunoscore is similar in untreated pa�ents (n=438) and pa�ents who received adjuvant chemotherapy (n=162) (5Y TTR of 83.4 (95% CI 77.6-89.9)) (p=0.37).

TTR according to the clinico-pathological risk categories (High Risk vs Low Risk) and Immunoscore (IS 0-1 vs IS 2-3-4) in untreated Stage II colon cancer pa�ents (n=1130)

TTR according to administra�on of adjuvant chemotherapy (Chemo vs No Chemo) and to the Immunoscore (IS 0-1 vs IS 2-3-4) in High-risk Stage II colon cancer pa�ents (n=874)

TTR according to administra�on of adjuvant chemotherapy (Chemo vs No Chemo) and to the Immunoscore (IS 0-1 vs IS 2-3-4) in elderly Stage II colon cancer pa�ents (all risk categories n=679)

Rela�ve importance of each risk parameter to survival risk using the χ² propor�on test for clinical parameters plus Immunoscore in Stage II pa�ents with high-risk feature(s) (n=286 (data available on MSI status and other clinico-pathological parameters))

Treatment decisions in High-Risk St II colon cancer pa�entsNo randomized trial has been conducted to demonstrate a poten�al benefit ofchemotherapy to High-risk Stage II Colon Cancer pa�ents.However, High-risk Stage II pa�ents defined as those with poor prognos�c clinico-pathologic features are typically considered for adjuvant chemotherapy.These risk features are imperfect and addi�onal risk factors are needed to guidetreatment decisions.

Treatment decisions in St II Elderly pa�ents• The median age at the �me of CRC diagnosis is 68 years

• However, clinical studies that evaluated the effect of adjuvant treatment regimens havea selec�on bias in favor of younger pa�ents

• The benefit of adjuvant treatment in the elderly pa�ents is s�ll unclear

Fig. 1

Fig. 2

Fig. 4Fig. 3

High-risk Stage II pa�ents, chemo vs no chemo

Subgroups:

Stage II colon cancer untreated pa�ents(no chemotherapy) : n= 1130

• Low-risk untreated Stage II pa�ents:n=500

• High-risk untreated Stage II pa�ents:n=630

Stage II High-risk: n=874(chemo n=244 vs no chemo n=630)

Stage II elderly pa�ents ≥70 years,all risk categories (n=679)

Immunoscore shows the highest contribu�on to predict survival(60%, stronger than all the other parameters).

Low-Risk Patients: 50/500 (44.25%) 5Y: 89.1 (86.1-92.1)

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Time to recurrence (Years)

Patie

nts

with

out e

vent

(%)

Low-Risk

High-Risk IS 0-1

High-Risk IS 2-3-4

High-Risk IS 0-1 Patients: 49/192 (16.99%) 5Y: 72.2 (65.6-79.6)High-Risk IS 2-3-4 Patients: 49/438 (38.76%) 5Y: 87.4 (83.9-91)

NO CHEMO IS 0-1

NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4CHEMO IS 0-1CHEMO IS 2-3-4

NO CHEMO IS 0-1 Patients: 33/145 (21.35%) 3Y: 79 (72.1−86.6)

NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Patients: 44/454 (66.86%) 3Y: 90.6 (87.6−93.7)

CHEMO IS 0-1 Patients: 6/29 (4.27%) 3Y: 78.7 (64.9−95.4)

CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Patients: 11/51 (7.51%) 3Y: 78.5 (67.5−91.3)

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Time to recurrence (Years)

Patie

nts

with

out e

vent

(%)

NO CHEMO IS 0-1

NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4

CHEMO IS 0-1

CHEMO IS 2-3-4

NO CHEMO IS 0-1 Patients: 49/192 (21.97%) 5Y: 72.2 (65.6−79.6)

NO CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Patients: 49/438 (50.11%) 5Y: 87.4 (83.9−91)

CHEMO IS 0-1 Patients: 20/82 (9.38%) 5Y: 73.6 (64.3−84.2)

CHEMO IS 2-3-4 Patients: 24/162 (18.54%) 5Y: 83.4 (77.6−89.8)

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Time to recurrence (Years)

Patie

nts

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(%)