1. Occult neoplastic cells in lymph node sinuses and recurrence/metastasis of stage II/III gastric cancer.
- Author
-
YASUTOMO SEKIDO, MASAYA MUKAI, MASASHI YAMAZAKI, TAKAYUKI TAJIMA, SOUICHIROU YAMAMOTO, SAYURI HASEGAWA, KYOKO KISHIMA, TAKUMA TAJIRI, and NAOYA NAKAMURA
- Subjects
- *
STOMACH cancer , *CANCER invasiveness , *CANCER relapse , *LYMPH nodes , *ONCOLOGIC surgery - Abstract
In the present study, we investigated the correlation between the presence of occult neoplastic cells (ONCs) in lymph node sinuses and recurrence/metastasis of stage II/III gastric cancer in 164 patients who underwent radical curative resection. We calculated the five-year relapse-free survival rate (5Y-RFS) and five-year overall survival rate (5Y-OS) of the ONC(+) and ONC(-) groups. The 5Y-RFS was 71.4% in the ONC(-) group and 47.5% in the ONC(+) group (P= 0.003). The 5Y-OS was 68.8 and 48.4%, respectively (P=0.008). ONCs were found in 34.8% of stage II patients and were also detected in 66.7% of stage III patients. For distinguishing between the recurrence and non-recurrence groups, the sensitivity of ONC(+) was 64.5% (40/62; P=0.003), the positive predictive value (PPV) was 49.4% (40/81), the specificity was 59.8% (61/102) and the negative predictive value (NPV) was 73.5% (61/83). This high sensitivity indicates that ONC positivity may be a significant indicator for high-risk patients in the early postoperative period, and a lack of ONCs may be a useful indicator for identifying low-risk patients, as patients without ONCs had a high NPV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF