The impact of surgery and oncological treatment on risk of type 2 diabetes onset in patients with colorectal cancer: nationwide cohort study in Denmark
Department of Endocrinology, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Denmark;
Department of Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Denmark;
Department of Surgical Gastroenterology, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Denmark;
Steno Diabetes Center Aarhus, Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark;
Centre for Physical Activity Research, Copenhagen University Hospital - Rigshospitalet, Denmark;
Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark;
Digestive Disease Center, Bispebjerg Hospital, Denmark;
Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research and Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Denmark;
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Caroline Krag
Maria Saur Svane
Sten Madsbad
Susanne Boel Graversen
Jesper Frank Christensen
Thorkild IA Sørensen
Louise Lang Lehrskov
Tinne Laurberg
(2024)
The impact of surgery and oncological treatment on risk of type 2 diabetes onset in patients with colorectal cancer: nationwide cohort study in Denmark
The American Society of Anesthesiologist score: I: healthy, but with CRC; III: mild systemic disease without substantial functional limitations; >II: severe systemic disease, includes ASA stages III, IV, V, VI.
‡
UICC stage, Union of International Cancer Control; stage I: T1 or T2; stage II: T3 or T4; stage III: N1 or N2; stage IV: Disseminated disease at time of diagnosis.
Table 2
Absolute incidence rates of type 2 diabetes (T2D) per 1000 person-years (95% CI) among colorectal cancer patients treated with different types of colorectal cancer surgery with and without chemotherapy.
The American Society of Anesthesiologist score: I: healthy, but with CRC; III: mild systemic disease without substantial functional limitations; >II: severe systemic disease, includes ASA stages III, IV, V, VI.
Table 3
Risk of developing type 2 diabetes after different types of colorectal cancer surgery with and without oncological treatment, unadjusted and adjusted analysis.
Unadjusted
Model 1
Model 2(a/b)
HR (95% CI)
p-Value
HR (95% CI)
p-Value
HR (95% CI)
p-Value
Surgery and chemotherapy
Right-No-Chemo
ref
Right-Chemo
1.02 (0.87;1.19)
0.799
0.99 (0.83;1.17)
0.880
1.01 (0.85;1.20)a
0.884
Left-No-Chemo
1.10 (0.98;1.24)
0.112
0.92 (0.81;1.05)
0.228
0.94 (0.82;1.07)a
0.333
Left-Chemo
1.07 (0.93;1.23)
0.339
0.93 (0.79;1.09)
0.366
0.97 (0.83;1.14)a
0.708
Rectal-No-Chemo
0.94 (0.83;1.06)
0.317
0.82 (0.72;0.94)
0.004
0.86 (0.75;0.98)a
0.028
Rectal-Chemo
0.96 (0.84;1.11)
0.610
0.84 (0.72;0.99)
0.031
0.89 (0.76;1.03)a
0.126
Surgery and radiation therapy
Rectal-No-Radiation
ref
Rectal-Radiation
1.07 (0.93;1.24)
0.336
0.98 (0.85;1.13)
0.804
0.97 (0.84;1.12)b
0.691
Surgery
All Colon
ref
All Rectal
0.90 (0.83;0.98)
0.013
0.87 (0.79;0.95)
0.002
0.89 (0.82;0.98)b
0.015
Additional files
Supplementary file 1
Risk of developing T2D after different types of colorectal cancer surgery with and without chemotherapy – adjusted for cancer stage, Model 1 and Model 2.
Cite this article (links to download the citations from this article in formats compatible with various reference manager tools)
Caroline Krag
Maria Saur Svane
Sten Madsbad
Susanne Boel Graversen
Jesper Frank Christensen
Thorkild IA Sørensen
Louise Lang Lehrskov
Tinne Laurberg
(2024)
The impact of surgery and oncological treatment on risk of type 2 diabetes onset in patients with colorectal cancer: nationwide cohort study in Denmark