“…From then on, a large number of clinical studies have been performed to understand the neutrophil-cancer relationship. Clinical data have often related elevated circulating neutrophil counts or elevated neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratios (NLRs) as a predictive parameter for poor outcome and formation of distant metastasis in patients with epithelial malignancies [367], including lung [368,170], gastric [159,163,369], renal cell carcinoma [370], ovarian [141], hepatic [143,148,371], pancreatic [138], colon cancer [145,372], and colorectal carcinoma [152] (Table 3). However, Caruso et al [200] observed that when analyzing the amount of tumor-infiltrated neutrophils in advanced gastric carcinoma, in female but not male, patients with higher TANs had a favorable prognosis.…”