It is important not to overinterpret the good survival outcomes reported by Kawahara et al. [1] for three-vs. two-field lymphadenectomy in esophageal cancer. They performed a retrospective review and found that patients who had less than four positive nodes had prolonged survival following three-fie
The number of lymph node metastases influences survival in esophageal cancer
β Scribed by Kawahara, Katsunobu; Maekawa, Takahumi; Okabayashi, Kan; Shiraishi, Takeshi; Yoshinaga, Yasuteru; Yoneda, Satoshi; Hideshima, Teru; Shirakusa, Takayuki
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 27 KB
- Volume
- 67
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-4790
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β¦ Synopsis
Background and Objectives: Lymph node involvement adversely affects the survival of patients with esophageal cancer. We retrospectively investigated whether the number of involved lymph nodes and the degree of lymph node dissection affect survival. Patients and Methods: Eighty-eight patients underwent surgical resection and reconstruction for T1-T3 thoracic esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. Patients were classified into three groups: group 1, 32 patients without lymph node involvement; group 2, 26 patients with 1 to 3 positive nodes; and group 3, 30 patients with ΠΌ4 involved lymph nodes. Results: The 3-year and 5-year survival rates were 34.8% and 30.0% in group 1, 30.0% and 22.7% in group 2, and 14.8% and 0% in group 3, respectively. The mean survival time (MST) X Β±SD of the patients in group 3 (453.06 Β± 74.5 days) was significantly shorter than in group 1 (450.1 Β± 450.5, P β«Χ‘β¬ 0.0005) and group 2 (937.3 Β± 1317.9, P β«Χ‘β¬ 0.0295). For patients in groups 1 and 2, the MST for three-field lymph node dissection (1136.9 Β± 1476.4 days) was longer than for two-field lymph node dissection (1007.4 Β± 1476.4 days, P β«Χ‘β¬ 0.0355). However, in group 3, there was no survival advantage to three-field lymph node dissection.
Conclusion:
We conclude that the survival in patients with thoracic esophageal cancer involving four or more nodes, is poorer than in patients with lesser involvement. Three-field lymph node dissection does contribute to prolonged survival in patients with node-negative disease or fewer than four positive nodes.
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## Background: Lymph node metastasis is a well known feature of poor prognosis in patients with esophageal adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma. however, a significant proportion of apparently lymph node negative patients die early of metastatic disease. the aim of this study was to determine
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