Abstract

Background: Specific guidelines recommend at least 15 or 16 lymph nodes (LNs) be examined to adequately assess nodal category of gastric cancer (GC), but the requirement for minimum number of regional LNs retrieval is not mentioned. This study aims to investigate survival significance from various numbers of perigastric (N1) LNs retrieval and to determine an optimal number harvested in such region.Study design: From April 1994 to March 2012, 1003 resectable GC patients with at least 15 LNs examined were included. Patients with at least 15 N1 nodes retrieval were assigned into study group, with the rest into control group. The 5-year overall survival (OS) rate was compared between two groups, and an optimal number of examined N1 nodes was detected by a survival joinpoint analysis.Results: 635 (63.3%) patients in study group had median 22 (range, 15-75) N1 nodes and 3 (range, 0-74) positive N1 nodes retrieval, with median 10 (range, 0-14) N1 nodes and 1 (range, 0-29) metastatic N1 nodes examined in control group. The number of N1 nodes retrieval was associated with tumor location (P=0.007), tumor stage (P<0.001) and total number of harvested LNs (r=0.691, P<0.001). Median survival time (79.0 vs. 72.0 months, P=0.462) and actual 5-year OS rate (41.0% vs. 39.2%, P=0.463) were slightly improved in study group compared with control group, with significance obtained via stage-by-stage analysis. The joinpoint analysis indicated that at least seven N1 nodes retrieval achieved survival significance (81.0 vs. 35.0 months, P=0.036), with survival superiority remained until reaching up to 15 N1 nodes.Conclusion: Adequate retrieval of perigastric LNs is essential for radical gastrectomy. A harvest of at least 7-15 perigastric LNs could achieve long-term survival benefit for GC patients.

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