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find Author "YU Kaicong" 2 results
  • Research progress on significance of ABO blood group in colorectal cancer

    ObjectiveTo comprehend the role of ABO blood groups antigens in the occurrence, development, screening, treatment, and prognosis of colorectal cancer (CRC). MethodThe literature on the researches relevant to relation between ABO blood groups and CRC in recent years was reviewed and analyzed. ResultsThere were two possible mechanisms relevant to the relation between the ABO blood groups antigens and the occurrence of CRC—Nucleotide polymorphisms in regulatory genes of the ABO blood groups antigens and lack of ABO blood groups antigens expression, and its abnormal expression in the cancer cells provided the clues for the screening of CRC. At present, it was found that the ABO blood groups were associated with the treatment and prognosis of the patients with CRC in the relatively fewer researches, but the detailed mechanism did not be clarified. ConclusionsFrom the summary of the literature results, researchers have studied the role of ABO blood groups in CRC, and have obtained some conclusions with clinical significance in the occurrence, development, screening, treatment, and prognosis of patients with CRC, suggesting that it has certain research prospects. However, relevant to research is less, the conclusions need to be further verified.

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  • Impact of literacy on long-term prognosis in colorectal cancer patients: a real-world study based on DACCA

    ObjectiveTo analyze the relation between the literacy and prognosis in the patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) in the current version of the Database from Colorectal Cancer of West China (DACCA). MethodsThe version of DACCA selected for this data analysis was updated on September 12, 2022. The data items analyzed included age, gender, literacy, tumour site, nature of tumour, pathological TNM (pTNM) stage, survival status, and survival time. The overall survival and disease-specific survival of the CRC patients with different literacy (illiteracy, primary, secondary, and tertiary educations) after radical resection were compared, and then which were analyzed in the patients with different pTNM stages. ResultsA total of 3 692 data eligible for the study were screened, of which 202 were illiteracy, 1 054 were primary education, 1 809 were secondary education, and 627 were tertiary education; And there were 13 of stage 0, 406 of stage Ⅰ, 1 193 of stage Ⅱ, 1 139 of stage Ⅲ, and 941 of stage Ⅳ. The differences in the comparison of the pTNM stage and the nature of the tumour among the patients with the four levels of literacy were not statistically significant (P>0.05), while the differences in the comparison of the gender, age, and tumour site were statistically significant (P<0.001). The overall survival and disease-specific survival curves of the CRC patients with different literacy had no statistical differences (χ2=1.982, P=0.576; χ2=2.618, P=0.454), and the stratified overall survival curves had no statistical differences among the patients with pTNM stages Ⅰ to Ⅳ (stage Ⅰ: χ2=1.361, P=0.715; stage Ⅱ: χ2=3.507, P=0.320; stage Ⅲ: χ2=3.144, P=0.370; stage Ⅳ: χ2=4.993, P=0.172), and the stratified disease-specific survival curves had no statistical differences (stage Ⅰ: χ2=0.723, P=0.868; stage Ⅱ: χ2=3.295, P=0.348; stage Ⅲ: χ2=4.767, P=0.190; stage Ⅳ: χ2=6.177, P=0.103). ConclusionsThe results of this study based on real-world big data analysis suggests that the differences of overall survival and disease-specific survival of CRC patients with different literacy levels (illiterate, primary, secondary, and tertiary education) are not statistically significant, and the results of stratified analysis based on pTNM staging are consistent with this. In the future, limitations of this study can be excluded and further analysis can be conducted by combining treatment details or expanding sample data to seek more realistic results.

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