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Reappraise role of lymph node status in patterns of recurrence following curative resection of gastric adenocarcinoma

Yi-Hui Tang, Jian‐Xian Lin, Jun-Peng Lin, Jia-Bin Wang, Jun Lu, Qi‐Yue Chen, Long‐Long Cao, Mi Lin, Ru‐Hong Tu, Chang‐Ming Huang, Ping Li, Chao‐Hui Zheng, Jian‐Wei Xie

2021Chinese Journal of Cancer Research12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

<sec><b>Objective</b>To examine the association between lymph node status and recurrence patterns in completely resected gastric adenocarcinoma.</sec><sec><b>Methods</b>We retrospectively assessed 1,694 patients who underwent curative gastrectomy from January 2010 to August 2014. Patients stratified according to lymph node status and recurrence patterns among different subgroups were compared.</sec><sec><b>Results</b>Of all, 517 (30.5%) patients developed recurrent disease, and complete data of recurrence could be obtained in 493 (95.4%) patients. For pN0 patients, the patterns of recurrence were different according to pT stage: locoregional recurrence was most common in patients with pT1−2 disease (57.1%), distant recurrence was most common in patients with pT3 disease (57.1%), and peritoneal recurrence was most common in patients with pT4a disease (66.7%). For pN+ patients, distant metastasis was most common pattern irrespective of pT stage. The site-specific trend of recurrence showed that locoregional recurrence increased within 5 years in patients with pN0−2 disease but plateaued 3 years after surgery in patients with pN3 disease. Time to recurrence was significantly longer for the pN0 patients compared with the pN+ patients (median: 25 <i>vs.</i> 16 months, P=0.001). Moreover, post-recurrence survival was significantly better for the pN0 patients than for the pN+ patients (median: 12 <i>vs.</i> 6 months, P&lt;0.001), especially in patients with non-peritoneal recurrence, late recurrence, single recurrence, and receipt of potential curative treatment.</sec><sec><b>Conclusions</b>Among clinicopathologic factors, lymph node status is the most important factor associated with recurrence patterns after curative gastrectomy. Lymph node status may be used as an adjunct in clinical decision-making about postoperative therapeutic and follow-up strategies.</sec>

Topics & Concepts

MedicineLymph nodeStage (stratigraphy)GastrectomyDiseaseAdenocarcinomaSurgeryInternal medicineLymph node metastasisLymphadenectomyGastroenterologyLymphCancerMetastasisPathologyPaleontologyBiologyGastric Cancer Management and OutcomesEsophageal Cancer Research and TreatmentColorectal Cancer Surgical Treatments