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Lymph node retrieval during esophagectomy with and without neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy: prognostic and therapeutic impact on survival.

Authors :
Koen Talsma A
Shapiro J
Looman CW
van Hagen P
Steyerberg EW
van der Gaast A
van Berge Henegouwen MI
Wijnhoven BP
van Lanschot JJ
Hulshof MC
van Laarhoven HW
Nieuwenhuijzen GA
Hospers GA
Bonenkamp JJ
Cuesta MA
Blaisse RJ
Busch OR
ten Kate FJ
Creemers GJ
Punt CJ
Plukker JT
Verheul HM
van Dekken H
van der Sangen MJ
Rozema T
Biermann K
Beukema JC
Piet AH
van Rij CM
Reinders JG
Tilanus HW
Source :
Annals of surgery [Ann Surg] 2014 Nov; Vol. 260 (5), pp. 786-92; discussion 792-3.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Objectives: We aimed to examine the association between total number of resected nodes and survival in patients after esophagectomy with and without nCRT.<br />Background: Most studies concerning the potentially positive effect of extended lymphadenectomy on survival have been performed in patients who underwent surgery alone. As nCRT is known to frequently "sterilize" regional nodes, it is unclear whether extended lymphadenectomy after nCRT is still useful.<br />Methods: Patients from the randomized CROSS-trial who completed the entire protocol (ie, surgery alone or chemoradiotherapy + surgery) were included. With Cox regression models, we compared the impact of number of resected nodes as well as resected positive nodes on survival in both groups.<br />Results: One hundred sixty-one patients underwent surgery alone, and 159 patients received multimodality treatment. The median (interquartile range) number of resected nodes was 18 (12-27) and 14 (9-21), with 2 (1-6) and 0 (0-1) resected positive nodes, respectively. Persistent lymph node positivity after nCRT had a greater negative prognostic impact on survival as compared with lymph node positivity after surgery alone. The total number of resected nodes was significantly associated with survival for patients in the surgery-alone arm (hazard ratio per 10 additionally resected nodes, 0.76; P=0.007), but not in the multimodality arm (hazard ratio 1.00; P=0.98).<br />Conclusions: The number of resected nodes had a prognostic impact on survival in patients after surgery alone, but its therapeutic value is still controversial. After nCRT, the number of resected nodes was not associated with survival. These data question the indication for maximization of lymphadenectomy after nCRT.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-1140
Volume :
260
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annals of surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25379850
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000000965