Objectives: The goal of the study was to examine the relationships among micrometastasis, pathological degree of differentiation and survival in patients with esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC).
Design: A single-center retrospective study of patients diagnosed with thoracic esophageal SCC.
Methods: Immunostaining using CK13 was carried out for all lymph nodes resected by radical esophagectomy with three-field lymphadenectomy. The relationships among micrometastasis to lymph nodes, degree of differentiation and survival were investigated.
Results: The 25 patients included 14 (56.0%) well-differentiated and 11 (44.0%) moderately differentiated cases. In multivariate analysis, well-differentiated cases were not related to micrometastasis (odds ratio (OR): 1.5, confidence interval (CI): 0.2-12, p=0.7). In multivariate analysis of survival, cases in pStage III or higher were likely to have shorter survival (hazard ratio (HR): 2.8, CI: 0.7-12, p=0.16), and those with micrometastasis also tended to have shorter survival (HR: 2.7, CI: 0.8-9, p=0.11)); however, well-differentiated cases were not significantly related to survival (HR: 1.5, CI: 0.4-5.5, p=0.5).
Conclusion: Micrometastasis to lymph nodes may be a prognostic factor even in advanced esophageal cancer. The degree of differentiation was not related to micrometastasis or survival.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11250017 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.14789/jmj.JMJ21-0041-OA | DOI Listing |
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