OBJECTIVE: High incidence of colorectal carcinoma turns it into a public health problem in our country. A few articles, as well as some doubts about patients age and disease evolution, made us study these features to know about tumor cells differentiation and tumor staging in the post-operative follow-up, comparing patients younger and older than 40 years old.
METHOD: Comparison of 205 colorectal carcinoma patients younger and older than 40 years according to symptoms duration, familial history, tumor site, tumor stage, tumor cells differentiation, operative death, metastases site and mortality up to the third year.
RESULTS: There were 20 in the younger group and 185 in the older group. There was no difference according to gender, symptoms duration, familial history, tumor site, tumor stage, cancer recurrence, operative mortality and surviving up to the third post-operative year. Tumors were less differentiated and abdominal metastases were more frequent in the younger group. In the older group, hepatic and pulmonary metastases were more common.
CONCLUSION: Results obtained in execution conditions of this study, comparing colorectal cancer patients with ages under and over 40 years old, allowed us to conclude that tumors were less differentiated among the younger group despite post-operative evolution having been similar.