Unaltered risk of colorectal cancer within 14–17 years of cholecystectomy: Updating of a population-based cohort study

Author:

Adami H-O1,Krusemo Ulla B2,Meirik O3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden

2. Department of Social Medicine, University Hospital, Uppsala, Sweden

3. Uppsala Data Center, Uppsala, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract The incidence of colorectal cancer after cholecystectomy was analysed in a historical population-based cohort study comprising 16439 patients who were completely followed up for 14-17 years after operation. The observed number of colorectal cancers (150) was lower than the expected number of 166·3 (relative risk (RR) = 0·90:95 percent confidence limits 0·77-1·05) and the overall risk for colon cancer (RR = 0·95) did not differ significantly from that of rectal cancer (RR = 0·82). Separate analyses by sex, age at operation and duration of follow-up revealed relative risks close to or lower than unity. Some deviations indicating a substantially reduced risk might have been due to the play of chance alone. Our results contradict the idea both of a causal and of a non-causal association—through common aetiological factors—between surgically confirmed gallbladder disease and colorectal cancer.

Funder

Swedish Cancer Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

Reference29 articles.

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4. Metabolic epidemiolgoy of colon cancer. Fecal bile acids and neutral sterols in colon cancer patients and patients with adenomatous polyps;Reddy;Cancer,1977

5. Promoting effects of bile acids in colon carcinogenesis in germ-free and conventional F344 rats;Reddy;Cancer Res,1977

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