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Impact of Lymphovascular Invasion on Survival Outcome in Patients With Gastric Cancer

Di Mei, Bochao Zhao, Jiale Zhang, Rui Luo, Huiwen Lu, Huimian Xu, Baojun Huang

2020American Journal of Clinical Pathology32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the prognostic significance of lymphovascular invasion (LVI) for patients with gastric cancer (GC). METHODS: A total of 1,720 consecutive patients who underwent curative gastrectomy were retrospectively identified. The association between LVI and clinicopathologic characteristics was determined and its impact on survival outcome was evaluated. RESULTS: LVI was detected in 21.3% of GC patients, 5.9% of patients with early GC, 24.0% of patients with advanced GC, and 6.7% of node-negative patients using H&E staining. Tumor size (odds ratio [OR], 1.509; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.159-1.965; P < .01), differentiated type (OR, 1.817; 95% CI, 1.377-2.398; P < .001), and the depth of tumor invasion (OR, 3.011; 95% CI, 2.174-4.171; P < .001) were independent predictive factors for LVI. LVI-positive patients have a poorer prognosis than LVI-negative patients, irrespective of tumor stage or lymph node metastasis. LVI was an independent prognostic factor for patients with GC (hazard ratio, 1.299; 95% CI, 1.112-1.518; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: LVI provided additional prognostic information for GC patients, and LVI-positive patients should be considered candidates for adjuvant chemotherapy.

Topics & Concepts

Lymphovascular invasionMedicineInternal medicineHazard ratioOdds ratioGastroenterologyConfidence intervalGastrectomyStage (stratigraphy)CancerOncologyMetastasisPaleontologyBiologyGastric Cancer Management and OutcomesGastrointestinal Tumor Research and TreatmentEsophageal Cancer Research and Treatment