| Literature DB >> 32646508 |
Yilin Shao1,2, Xin Liu1,2, Silong Hu3, Yingjian Zhang3, Wentao Li1,2, Xiaoyan Zhou4, Qifeng Wang4, Yifeng Hou1,2, Yong Chen1,2, Yanli Wang4, Yaohui Wang1,2, Zhiguo Luo5,6, Xichun Hu7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sentinel lymph node is the first stop of lymphatic spreading of cancer with known primary. The lymph node metastasis pattern of cancer of unknown primary (CUP) is unclear and has been presumed to follow the same pathway. To test this hypothesis, data of all 716 patients clinically diagnosed as CUP in our center were collected.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer of unknown primary; Diagnosis; Sentinel lymph node
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32646508 PMCID: PMC7350562 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-020-07042-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1Methods used to establish a diagnosis of primary lesion
Lymph node metastasis pattern of cancer of unknown primary and compatibility with sentinel node theory(N = 64)
| Lymph node distribution | Primary tumor site | N | Compatibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cervical | Head and neck | 23 | |
| Nasopharynx | 5 | Yes | |
| Oropharynx | 5 | Yes | |
| Parotid | 4 | Yes | |
| Sinus piriformis | 3 | Yes | |
| Root of tongue | 3 | Yes | |
| submandibular | 2 | Yes | |
| gland | 1 | Yes | |
| larynx | 1 | Yes | |
Esophagus (cervical segment) | 1 | Yes | |
| Cervical+supraclavicular | Cervical cancer of the uterus | 1 | No |
| Axillary | Breast | 19 | Yes |
| Axillary+supraclavicular | Breast | 1 | Yes |
| Axillary+internal mammary | Breast | 1 | Yes |
| Axillary+deep surface of pectoralis minor muscle | Breast | 1 | Yes |
| Lung hilar±mediastinal | Lung | 4 | Yes |
| Lung hilar±mediastinal +supraclavicular | Lung | 2 | Yes |
| Lung hilar±mediastinal+cervical | Lung/Prostate | 2/1 | Yes/No |
| Lung hilar±mediastinal+inguinal | Lung | 1 | Yes |
| Mediastinal+supraclavicular+lateral thoracic | Kidney | 1 | No |
| Retroperitoneal+celiac | Pancreas | 2 | Yes |
| Renal hilar+retroperitoneal | Kidney | 1 | Yes |
| Peri-intestinal | Colon | 1 | Yes |
| Peri-iliac vessels+inguinal | Anal canal | 1 | Yes |
| Peri-iliac vessels+inguinal +retroperitoneal | Bladder | 1 | Yes |
Fig. 2Images of a clinical CUP patient with cervical lymph node metastases. Nasopharynx endoscopy was negative in 2011, with the primary lesion emergent in 2013. The primary cancer was finally pathologically confirmed to be nasopharyngeal cancer, demonstrating the value of SLN theory in tracking the primary. A: Image of 18F-FDG PET-CT scan in 2011 showing only cervical lymph node metastases (black and white arrow) and was otherwise normal. B: Magnetic resonance imaging of nasopharynx in 2011 with no suspicious lesion. C: Magnetic resonance imaging of nasopharynx in 2013 with a suspicious lesion (red arrow), which was later confirmed by biopsy and pathological data
Fig. 3Images of a CUP patient with left iliac vessels and left inguinal lymph node metastasis. The patient had no symptoms such as diarrhea, constipation, or hematochezia. 18F-FDG PET-CT images after left inguinal lymph node surgery showed metastasis in a lymph node lining the iliac vessels identified (black arrow), and he was otherwise normal. Repeat anorectal examination showed a suspicious lesion in the anal canal, which was finally pathologically confirmed by enteroscopy, although the prior enteroscopy showed no abnormal findings
Clinical and pathological features of clinical CUP patients who had undergone histopathological examinations of suspicious primary lesions
| Group A | Group B | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years (x ± s) | 54.47 ± 9.73 | 55.10 ± 10.98 | 0.679 |
| Sex | 0.956 | ||
| Male | 31(48%) | 98(48%) | |
| Female | 33(52%) | 106(52%) | |
| Bone metastasis | 6(9%) | 12(6%) | 0.330 |
| Visceral metastasis | 9(14%) | 14(7%) | 0.073 |
| SCC | 26(41%) | 66(32%) | 0.224 |
| Non SCC | 38(59%) | 138(68%) | |
| Adenocarcinoma | 34(53%) | 91(45%) | 0.233 |
| Non adenocarcinoma | 30(47%) | 113(55%) | |
| Poor- or un-differentiated | 4(6%) | 47(23%) | 0.003* |
| Differentiated | 60(94%) | 157(77%) |
SCC Squamous cell carcinoma. *P values less than 0.05 were considered statistically significant