Jin He1, Jae Ri Kim2, Seung Yeoun Lee3, Jinseok Oh3, Taesung Park4, Mee Joo Kang2, Wooil Kwon2, Hongbeom Kim2, Sun-Whe Kim2, John L Cameron1, Christopher L Wolfgang1, Jin-Young Jang2. 1. Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. 2. Department of Surgery and Cancer Research Institute, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea. 3. Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Sejong University College of Natural Sciences, Seoul, Korea. 4. Department of Statistics, Seoul National University College of Natural Sciences, Seoul, Korea.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We built a multinational retrospective database of patients with ampulla of Vater cancer to develop a reliable new staging system. METHOD: This study included 841 patients with ampulla of Vater cancer after curative surgery at Seoul National University Hospital (n = 440) and Johns Hopkins University medical institutions (n = 401) between 1985 and 2013. RESULTS: The 5-year overall survival (OS) rates of patients staged according to the 7th American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system were 80.3%, 60.9%, 58.1%, 36.6%, 17.9%, and 25.0% for Stages IA (n = 140), IB (n = 194), IIA (n = 115), IIB (n = 348), III (n = 33), and IV (n = 4), respectively. Five-year OS rates were similar in patients with Stage IB (T2N0M0) and IIA (T3N0M0) tumors (P = 0.556), but differed significantly between other pairs of groups. The number of positive lymph nodes (PLN) enhanced prognosis when stratified as 0, 1-2 and ≥3 (P < 0.001). The revised staging system consisted of Stages I (T1, PLN 0), IIA (T2-T3, PLN 0), IIB (T1-T3, PLN 1-2), III (PLN ≥3 or any T4), and IV (any M1), with 5-year OS rates differing significantly in each pair of groups, including Stages I and IIA (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: This new staging system has better discriminatory ability in stratifying 5-year OS rates based on a large multinational database.
BACKGROUND: We built a multinational retrospective database of patients with ampulla of Vater cancer to develop a reliable new staging system. METHOD: This study included 841 patients with ampulla of Vater cancer after curative surgery at Seoul National University Hospital (n = 440) and Johns Hopkins University medical institutions (n = 401) between 1985 and 2013. RESULTS: The 5-year overall survival (OS) rates of patients staged according to the 7th American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system were 80.3%, 60.9%, 58.1%, 36.6%, 17.9%, and 25.0% for Stages IA (n = 140), IB (n = 194), IIA (n = 115), IIB (n = 348), III (n = 33), and IV (n = 4), respectively. Five-year OS rates were similar in patients with Stage IB (T2N0M0) and IIA (T3N0M0) tumors (P = 0.556), but differed significantly between other pairs of groups. The number of positive lymph nodes (PLN) enhanced prognosis when stratified as 0, 1-2 and ≥3 (P < 0.001). The revised staging system consisted of Stages I (T1, PLN 0), IIA (T2-T3, PLN 0), IIB (T1-T3, PLN 1-2), III (PLN ≥3 or any T4), and IV (any M1), with 5-year OS rates differing significantly in each pair of groups, including Stages I and IIA (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: This new staging system has better discriminatory ability in stratifying 5-year OS rates based on a large multinational database.