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Background: Lymph node (LN) metastasis is a well-known poor prognostic factor of pancreatic cancer. LN metastasis, through direct invasion of tumor cell to peritumoral lymph nodes (PTLN), is treated as the same as those which spread through lymphatic channels. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of PTLN invasion on the oncologic outcome of pancreatic cancer.
Methods: Five hundred and six patients who underwent operation for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma from 2012 to 2018 were reviewed. PTLN invasion was defined as direct invasion of tumor cells in contact with main tumor.
Results: Among the 506 patients, 112 patients (22.1%) had PTLN invasion. PTLN invasion group (PTLNI) showed better disease-free survival than regional LN metastasis group (RLNM) and combined LN metastasis group (CLNM) (PTLNI 21 vs RLNM 11 vs CLNM 12 months, P = .003). There was no significant difference between N0 and PTLNI (PTLNI 21 vs N0 23 months, P = .999). In multivariate analysis, conventional LN metastasis was a significant factor compared to N0, but PTLN invasion was not (hazard ratio 0.786 [0.507-1.220], P = .283).
Conclusion: Because PTLN invasion does not adversely affect survival in the same way as LN metastasis does, pancreatic cancer-may be overstaged if PTLN invasion were dealt in the same manner as a metastatic LN. Therefore, PTLN invasion should be disregarded from current nodal staging system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jhbp.940 | DOI Listing |
J Hepatobiliary Pancreat Sci
October 2021
Division of Pancreatobiliary Surgery, Department of Surgery, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Background: Lymph node (LN) metastasis is a well-known poor prognostic factor of pancreatic cancer. LN metastasis, through direct invasion of tumor cell to peritumoral lymph nodes (PTLN), is treated as the same as those which spread through lymphatic channels. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of PTLN invasion on the oncologic outcome of pancreatic cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHead Neck
April 2016
Department of General Surgery, Institute of Micro-Invasive Surgery of Zhejiang University, Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China.
Background: There are no specific therapeutic guidelines for thyroid cancers confined to the isthmus. To determine whether isthmic papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) can be treated with thyroid isthmusectomy and limited neck dissection, we analyzed factors related to central lymph node (CLN) metastasis in patients with clinically node-negative (cN0), solitary, isthmic PTC.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 73 consecutive patients who underwent surgery for solitary isthmic, PTC.
Laryngoscope
May 2005
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Vrije Universiteit Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Objectives: The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the prognostic significance of paratracheal lymph node (PTLN) metastases for tumor recurrence and survival for patients treated with total laryngectomy (TL) and PTLN dissection.
Study Design: Records from 85 patients who underwent TL combined with PTLN dissection for laryngeal or hypopharyngeal carcinomas were reviewed.
Results: In 20 of 85 (24%) patients, PTLN metastases were found, and in 7 patients, extranodal spread (ENS) was present in these metastases.
Invasion Metastasis
February 1992
Pathologisch Instituut, University Hospital, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
The omental lymphoid organ (OLO) is a part of the greater omentum composed of vascularized milky spots situated between fat cells and containing lymphocytes, plasma cells and macrophages. We analysed the disappearance of intraperitoneally injected tumor cells from the peritoneal cavity and their infiltration into and disappearance from the OLO and the parathymic lymph nodes (PTLN) that drain the peritoneal cavity. After intraperitoneal inoculation of irradiated syngeneic tumor cells, they were visible in the OLO within 24 h.
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