Literature DB >> 24379578

Prognosis of patients with gastric cancer and solitary lymph node metastasis.

Chun-Qiu Chen1, Xiao-Jiang Wu1, Zhen Yu1, Zhao-De Bu1, Ke-Qiang Zuo1, Zi-Yu Li1, Jia-Fu Ji1.   

Abstract

AIM: To investigate the relationship of solitary lymph node metastasis (SLNM) and age with patient survival in gastric cancer (GC).
METHODS: The medical records databases of China's Beijing Cancer Hospital at the Peking University School of Oncology and Shanghai Tenth People's Hospital affiliated to Tongji University were searched retrospectively to identify patients with histologically proven GC and SLNM who underwent surgical resection between October 2003 and December 2012. Patients with distant metastasis or gastric stump carcinoma following resection for benign disease were excluded from the analysis. In total, 936 patients with GC + SLNM were selected for analysis and the recorded parameters of clinicopathological disease and follow-up (range: 13-2925 d) were collected. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to stratify patients by age (≤ 50 years-old, n = 198; 50-64 years-old, n = 321; ≥ 65 years-old, n = 446) and by metastatic lymph node ratio [MLR < 0.04 (1/25), n = 180; 0.04-0.06 (1/25-1/15), n = 687; ≥ 0.06 (1/15), n = 98] for 5-year survival analysis. The significance of intergroup differences between the survival curves was assessed by a log-rank test.
RESULTS: The 5-year survival rate of the entire GC + SLNM patient population was 49.9%. Stratification analysis showed significant differences in survival time (post-operative days) according to age: ≤ 50 years-old: 950.7 ± 79.0 vs 50-64 years-old: 1697.8 ± 65.9 vs ≥ 65 years-old: 1996.2 ± 57.6, all P < 0.05. In addition, younger age (≤ 50 years-old) correlated significantly with mean survival time (r = 0.367, P < 0.001). Stratification analysis also indicated an inverse relationship between increasing MLR and shorter survival time: < 0.04: 52.8% and 0.04-0.06: 51.1% vs ≥ 0.06: 40.5%, P < 0.05. The patients with the shortest survival times and rates were younger and had a high MLR (≥ 0.06): ≤ 50 years-old: 496.4 ± 133.0 and 0.0% vs 50-65 years-old: 1180.9 ± 201.8 and 21.4% vs ≥ 65 years-old: 1538.4 ± 72.4 and 37.3%, all P < 0.05. The same significant trend in shorter survival times and rates for younger patients was seen with the mid-range MLR group (0.04-0.06), but the difference between the two older groups was not significant. No significant differences were found between the age groups of patients with MLR < 0.04. Assessment of clinicopathological parameters identified age group, Borrmann type, histological type and tumor depth as the most important predictors of the survival rates and times observed for this study population.
CONCLUSION: GC patients below 51 years of age with MLR of SLNM above 0.06 have shorter life expectancy than their older counterparts.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Age; Gastric cancer; Metastatic lymph node ratio; Solitary lymph node metastasis; Survival

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24379578      PMCID: PMC3870506          DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i46.8611

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Gastroenterol        ISSN: 1007-9327            Impact factor:   5.742


  47 in total

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1.  Serum fibrinogen levels are positively correlated with advanced tumor stage and poor survival in patients with gastric cancer undergoing gastrectomy: a large cohort retrospective study.

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Review 2.  Prognostic Significance of Solitary Lymphnode Metastasis and Micrometastasis in Gastric Cancer.

Authors:  Konstantinos D Mpallas; Vasileios I Lagopoulos; Apostolos G Kamparoudis
Journal:  Front Surg       Date:  2018-10-18

3.  MECP2 expression in gastric cancer and its correlation with clinical pathological parameters.

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  3 in total

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