Prognostic factors in patients with squamous oesophageal cancer associated with solitary lymph node metastasis after oesophagectomy and extended lymphadenectomy
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- Published online on: January 1, 2003 https://doi.org/10.3892/or.10.1.75
- Pages: 75-80
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Abstract
It is not fully understood whether oesophageal cancer, associated with solitary lymph node metastasis, is still a local disease or already a systemic one. Among 283 patients with squamous oesophageal cancer who underwent oesophagectomy and 3-field lymphadenectomy, 37 patients had single metastasized nodes. Clinicopathologic factors, following Japanese Guideline for the Clinical and Pathological studies on Carcinoma of the Esophagus, related to survival and pre-operative predictability of nodal involvement was studied. Five-year survival was 48%. Initial pattern of recurrence was mostly haematogenous. Among the factors related to survival, grade of lymph node metastasis (pN1 vs. pN2, pN3, p=0.006) was more closely related than depth of invasion (pT1, pT2 vs. pT3, pT4, p=0.037). Five-year survival was 71.7% for pN1 patients, whereas it was 22% for pN2 or pN3 patients. Of the metastasized nodes 65% were <10 mm, and 27% was <5 mm in the maximum diameter. Oesophageal cancer is still a local disease in half of the patients with a solitary metastasized node. For these patients, dissection along the recurrent laryngeal nerve is necessary to retrieve the node possibly metastasized.