Artigo Revisado por pares

Number and Size of Lymph Nodes Recovered From Dukes B Rectal Cancers: Correlation with Prognosis and Histologic Antitumor Immune Response

2007; Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; Volume: 50; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1007/s10350-007-9024-3

ISSN

1530-0358

Autores

John Murphy, Marc Pocard, Jeremy R. Jass, Gerald C. O’Sullivan, Garry Lee, Ian C. Talbot,

Tópico(s)

Cancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers

Resumo

In rectal cancer variation in lymph node recovery influences the detection of nodal metastases and prognosis among Dukes B (Stage II) cases. However, the possible prognostic importance of node size and inherent patient/tumor characteristics in determining node recovery has not been studied.We examined 269 Dukes B (Stage II) rectal tumors, with a mean of 12 nodes per case. Primary tumor characteristics were correlated with the number and size of recovered nodes. Clinical follow-up permitted determination of long-term survival.The five-year survival of 94 Dukes B cases with nine or fewer nodes was 69.4 percent vs. 87.6 percent in 175 cases with ten or more nodes (P = 0.001). Lymph nodes were smaller in patients dying of recurrence; among 130 Dukes B patients whose mean node diameter was or =4 mm. The number and size of recovered nodes was related to patient age, histologic antitumor immune response, and tumor growth pattern. By combining the number and size of nodes, a poor prognosis subgroup of 98 Dukes B patients with relatively few large nodes (no more than 5 measuring > or =4 mm) was identified with a five-year survival of 65.6 percent compared with 89.6 percent for the remaining 158 Dukes B cases (P < 0.0001).In Dukes B rectal tumors, the number and size of lymph nodes are related to inherent patient and tumor characteristics and permit the identification of Dukes B cases at increased risk of recurrence. A valid comparison of nodal sampling efficiency between centers necessitates measuring and counting harvested lymph nodes.

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