Purpose: The clinical implications of mucinous components in rectal tumors, especially with regard to the efficacy of neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy, remain unclear.
Methods: One hundred and thirty rectal cancer patients who received curative resection after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy were retrospectively reviewed. Patients were classified into 3 groups according to the proportion of extracellular mucin: low (<5 %), moderate (5-25 %), and high (>25 %).
Results: There were 82 (63.1 %), 26 (20.0 %), and 22 (16.9 %) patients in the low, moderate, and high mucin groups, respectively. Patients with a high mucinous tumor component were significantly more likely to have an advanced tumor stage (p = 0.010) and a shorter disease-free (p = 0.002) and distant recurrence-free survivals (p < 0.001), whereas the mucinous tumor component showed no correlation with local recurrence (p = 0.101). A high mucinous component was also an independent predictive factor for a shorter disease-free survival (p = 0.041, hazard ratio = 2.56) and distant recurrence-free survival (p = 0.001, hazard ratio = 5.74) according to a multivariate analysis.
Conclusions: Because the mucinous components showed little correlation with local recurrence, mucinous cancer should not be a determining factor for chemoradiotherapy. However, the frequent occurrence of metachronous distant metastasis among patients with a high mucin component makes this a possible indicator for more robust postoperative adjuvant treatment and close surveillance of recurrence.
Keywords: Chemoradiotherapy; Distant metastasis; Mucin; Rectal cancer; Recurrence.