Colon cancer is the third most frequent malignancy in the Western world. Average 5 year-survival is around 70% and depends on the stage of the disease being very poor (under 10% 5-year survival)... Show moreColon cancer is the third most frequent malignancy in the Western world. Average 5 year-survival is around 70% and depends on the stage of the disease being very poor (under 10% 5-year survival) for stage IV patients and excellent (more than 90% 5 year survival) for stage I patients. The prognosis of patients with stage II varies between 80 and 60% 5-year survival. The causes of this variation remain unclear. Furthermore, the prognosis of patients with stage III has improved significantly, reaching 70% 5-year survival, since the introduction of adjuvant chemotherapy. However, still 30% of the patients with stage III disease that do not respond to chemotherapy. Therefore, reliable predictive and prognostic markers in stage II and III colon carcinoma are necessary to be able to elucidate whether a patient is going to respond to therapy or not and to be able to offer personalized treatment. In this research project, we aimed to identify predictive markers of therapy response in stage III disease and prognostic markers in stage II and III colon carcinoma. The first three chapters focus on the value of known single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) in genes involved in the activation, metabolism of chemotherapeutic drugs like 5-fluorouracil and oxaliplatin as well as in the repair of DNA damage caused by these drugs as predictive markers for therapy response. In the remaining chapters , the focus is placed on the identification of molecular prognostic markers in stages II and III. Several mutations in known cancer driver genes and genes involved in signal transduction have been studied. Show less