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Occult neoplastic cells in the lymph node sinuses and recurrence/metastasis of stage III/Dukes' C colorectal cancer. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined lymph nodes from 80 colorectal cancer patients to explore how the presence of occult neoplastic cells (ONCs) correlates with cancer recurrence or metastasis, dividing patients into recurrence and non-recurrence groups.
  • - It found that detecting single ONCs and clusters of ONCs had high sensitivity rates (87.5%) for identifying patients who would experience recurrence, indicating the potential usefulness of these markers in assessing risk.
  • - Overall, the combination of single ONCs and clusters proved to be a strong indicator of high recurrence risk, while ONCs can help identify low-risk patients in stage III colorectal cancer.

Article Abstract

Lymph nodes from patients with colorectal cancer were immunohistochemically stained for cytokeratin to investigate the relationship between the presence of occult neoplastic cells (ONCs) and recurrence/metastasis. A total of 80 patients with stage III/Dukes' C colorectal cancer were divided into 16 patients who developed recurrence/metastasis (recurrence group) and 64 patients without recurrence (non-recurrence group). ONCs were compared between the two groups with respect to i) single cells (≥ 3 floating ONCs), ii) clusters of cells (1 or more floating aggregates of 2-20 ONCs) and iii) single cells + clusters. When single cells were detected, the sensitivity for recurrence was 87.5% (14/16, p = 0.002), the positive predictive value (PPV) was 32.6% (14/43), the specificity was 54.7% (35/64) and the negative predictive value (NPV) was 94.6% (35/37). For clusters, the sensitivity was 87.5% (14/16, p<0.001), PPV was 41.2% (14/34), specificity was 68.8% (44/64) and NPV 95.7% (44/46). With single cells + clusters, the values were 87.5% (14/16, p<0.001), 48.3% (14/29), 76.6% (49/64) and 96.1% (49/51), respectively. These results suggest that the detection of single cells + clusters is a sensitive indicator of a high risk of recurrence/ metastasis, while ONCs are useful for identifying the low-risk group of patients with stage III colorectal cancer.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/or.2011.1183DOI Listing

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