2011
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.25973
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Number of lymph nodes examined and prognosis among pathologically lymph node-negative patients after preoperative chemoradiation therapy for rectal adenocarcinoma

Abstract: BACKGROUND Preoperative chemoradiation for rectal cancer can decrease the number of evaluable lymph nodes. Hence, the prognostic role of lymph node evaluation in patients with rectal cancer who receive preoperative chemoradiation is unclear. The authors of this report evaluated the prognostic impact of the number of lymph nodes examined in patients with rectal cancer who had negative lymph nodes based on the pathologic extent of disease (ypN0) after they received preoperative chemoradiation. METHODS Between … Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Several other factors, such as high ypT stage [22], small number of lymph nodes examined [23], lymphovascular invasion [24], positive circumferential resection margin [7,25], and higher level of carcinoembryonic antigen [26], also appear to have an adverse prognostic impact in this setting. However, our results suggest that the adverse impact on HR hazard ratio, CI confidence interval, CRM circumferential resection margin, LN lymph node, DR desmoplastic reaction, PR peritoneal reflection, NS not selected postoperative survival of immature DR might be more important than these conventional factors, although this needs to be validated in independent cohorts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Several other factors, such as high ypT stage [22], small number of lymph nodes examined [23], lymphovascular invasion [24], positive circumferential resection margin [7,25], and higher level of carcinoembryonic antigen [26], also appear to have an adverse prognostic impact in this setting. However, our results suggest that the adverse impact on HR hazard ratio, CI confidence interval, CRM circumferential resection margin, LN lymph node, DR desmoplastic reaction, PR peritoneal reflection, NS not selected postoperative survival of immature DR might be more important than these conventional factors, although this needs to be validated in independent cohorts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Some researchers question the need for definitive surgery after a 'potentially-curative' neoadjuvant therapy. 9,10 However, other studies demonstrate that a substantial number of patients will retain evidence of positive nodal involvement after neoadjuvant therapy, which has an adverse prognostic impact. 10,11 This has led to some investigations into the genetic basis of resistance to neoadjuvant therapy.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…9,10 However, other studies demonstrate that a substantial number of patients will retain evidence of positive nodal involvement after neoadjuvant therapy, which has an adverse prognostic impact. 10,11 This has led to some investigations into the genetic basis of resistance to neoadjuvant therapy. 12 Our study and its findings potentially adds to the ability to predict prognosis in these patients who are resistant to neoadjuvant therapy.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…17 In addition, Tsai et al conducted a study on 372 patients with lymph node-negative rectal cancer who received preoperative chemoradiation; patients who had[7 lymph nodes retrieved had a significantly lower rate of recurrence and cancer-specific survival. 18 However, those studies had no standardized assessment for all patients over the 10-year period, which may have resulted in inaccurate staging that could affect prognosis. Recent retrospective studies with standardized surgical and pathologic techniques have failed to show any correlation between the number of lymph nodes retrieved and patient outcome after rectal cancer surgery after preoperative chemoradiation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%