Abstract

Objective: To investigate the risk factors for lymph node metastasis in patients with early gastric cancer and establish a model for prediction of risk. Methods: The cohort of this retrospective observational study comprised 1096 patients who had undergone radical gastric cancer surgery combined with standard D1 lymphadenectomy and been diagnosed with early gastric cancer by postoperative pathology in Zhongshan Hospital affiliated with Fudan University from January 2016 to July 2022. The patients were allocated to groups with and without lymph node metastases. Clinicopathological characteristics were compared between the two groups and multi-factor logistic regression analysis used to identify independent risk factors for lymph node metastasis in patients with early gastric cancer. Indications for endoscopic resection in the Japanese Gastric Cancer Association (JGCA) guideline were also incorporated into construction of the model. The patient cohort was divided into training and validation sets in a 6:4 ratio. The identified independent risk factors were used to construct a predictive nomogram. Receiver operating characteristic curves were plotted separately and the difference between them in predictive efficacy was compared using the area under the curve (AUC). Results: A total of 1,096 patients with early gastric cancer were included, with 750 males and 346 females. Their average age was (61.4±10.9) years old, and the mean tumor diameter was (23.8±11.4) mm. Among them, 188 patients (17.2%) had positive lymph node metastasis, with 109 cases in N1 stage, 42 cases in N2 stage, and 37 cases in N3 stage. Additionally, 462 patients were in T1a stage, while 634 patients were in T1b stage. Univariate analysis showed that tumor diameter, location, Lauren classification, gross morphology, histological type, intravascular invasion, ulceration, differentiation type and tumor T stage were associated with lymph node metastasis after radical gastrectomy for early gastric cancer (all P<0.05). Multifactorial analysis showed that the presence of intravascular invasion (OR=14.822, 95%CI: 9.323-23.572, P<0.001), undifferentiated type (OR=3.095, 95%CI: 1.649-5.811, P<0.001), tumor T1b (OR=1.798, 95%CI: 1.053-3.079, P=0.032), and tumor diameter ≥2 cm (OR=1.229, 95%CI: 1.031-1.469, P=0.022) were independent risk factors for lymph node metastasis. The baseline data of the training set and validation set were consistent in terms of balance (all P>0.05). We used the above variables to establish a predictive nomogram for lymph node metastasis in patients with early gastric cancer. The AUC values obtained from the validation of the model in the training and validation sets were 0.880 (95%CI: 0.849-0.911) and 0.881 (95%CI: 0.841-0.921), respectively, and were significantly better than the predictive efficacy based on the JGCA guideline (AUC=0.777, 95%CI: 0.746-0.809, P<0.001). Conclusions: Patients with early gastric cancer and intravascular invasion, undifferentiated tumors, tumor T1b, and diameter ≥2 cm are at higher risk of postoperative lymph node metastasis than other patients. The predictive model developed in this study more accurately predicts lymph node metastasis in patients with early gastric cancer than previously proposed methods.

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