Artigo Revisado por pares

Prognostic heterogeneity of the seventh edition of UICC Stage III gallbladder carcinoma: Which patients benefit from surgical resection?

2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 43; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.ejso.2017.01.001

ISSN

1532-2157

Autores

Jun Sakata, Takashi Kobayashi, Takuma Ohashi, Yuki Hirose, Kabuto Takano, Kazuyasu Takizawa, Koh Miura, Hiroyuki Ishikawa, Koji Toge, Kizuki Yuza, Daiki Soma, Takao Ando, Toshifumi Wakai,

Tópico(s)

Viral-associated cancers and disorders

Resumo

This study sought to evaluate the prognostic heterogeneity of Stage III (Union for International Cancer Control, seventh edition) gallbladder carcinoma.Of 175 patients enrolled with gallbladder carcinoma who underwent radical resection, 22 were classified with Stage IIIA disease (T3N0M0) and 46 with Stage IIIB disease (T2N1M0 [n = 23] and T3N1M0 [n = 23]). The median number of retrieved lymph nodes per patient was 18.This staging system failed to stratify outcomes between Stages IIIA and IIIB; survival after resection was better for patients with Stage IIIB disease than for patients with Stage IIIA disease, with 5-year survival of 54.9% and 41.0%, respectively (p = 0.366). Multivariate analysis for patients with Stage III disease revealed independently better survival for patients with T2N1M0 than for patients with T3N0M0 (p = 0.016) or T3N1M0 (p = 0.001), with 5-year survival of 77.0%, 41.0%, and 31.0%, respectively. When N1 status was subdivided according to the number of positive nodes, 5-year survival in patients with T2M0 with 1-2 positive nodes, T2M0 with ≥3 positive nodes, T3M0 with 1-2 positive nodes, and T3M0 with ≥3 positive nodes was 83.3%, 50.0%, 45.8%, and 0%, respectively (p < 0.001).The prognosis of T2N1M0 disease was better than that of T3N0/1M0 disease, suggesting that not all node-positive patients will have uniformly poor outcomes after resection of gallbladder carcinoma. T2M0 with 1-2 positive nodes leads to a favorable outcome after resection, whereas T3M0 with ≥3 positive nodes indicates a dismal prognosis.

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