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Detection of Lymphatic Micrometastases in Patients With Stages I and II Colorectal Cancer: Impact on Five-Year Survival
Authors:Udo?Kronberg  Email author" target="_blank">Francisco?López-KostnerEmail author  Gonzalo?Soto  Alvaro?Zú?iga A  Ignacio?Wistuba  Vanessa?Miranda  Eliana?Pinto  Paola?Viviani  Guillermo?Marshall
Institution:(1) Department of Digestive Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, Catholic University of Chile, Santiago, Chile;(2) Department of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Catholic University of Chile, Santiago, Chile;(3) Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Catholic University of Chile, Santiago, Chile
Abstract:PURPOSE: Despite having removed the whole macroscopic disease (curative intent surgery), one of five patients with Stages I and II colorectal cancer will develop recurrence. Lymphatic micrometastases detected by immunohistochemistry could be one of explanation for recurrence and cancer-related death in patients without lymph node involvement at light microscopy. However, the biologic importance of micrometastases remains unclear. This study was designed to determine the impact of micrometastases in five-year survival in patients with Stages I and II colorectal cancer.METHODS: This retrospective study included patients operated on between May 1989 and January 1999 for colorectal cancer without histopathologic lymph node involvement. Patients who received any adjuvant therapy were excluded. Immunohistochemical staining of the lymph nodes was performed with antipancytokeratin antibodies. Follow-up data were obtained from the clinical database and death certificates. Survival was estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method and compared by the log-rank test.RESULTS: Micrometastases were observed in 26 of 90 patients (28.9 percent). The mean follow-up time was 90.7 (range, 11–160) months. Seventeen cancer-related deaths occurred during follow-up (18.9 percent), 6 of them in patients with micrometastases (23.1 percent) and 11 in patients without micrometastases (17.2 percent; P = 0.559). Cancer-specific five-year survival was 87 percent in the whole group and 81 percent in patients positive for micrometastases vs. 90 percent in negative patients (P = 0.489).CONCLUSIONS: The presence of micrometastases in patients with Stages I and II colorectal cancer seems not to have any impact on cancer-specific survival.Supported by the Apertus Research Program (Andromaco Pharmaceutical Company) and by The National Public Grant (FONDECYT #1000556).
Keywords:Colorectal cancer  Lymphatic micrometastases  Immunohistochemistry  Follow-up  Cancer-specific survival
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