Abstract

Abstract Background Number of positive lymph nodes involved is an important prognostic indicator in Oesophago-Gastric cancer survival post surgery. We present an 8 year study examining the number of lymph nodes involved and its impacts on long term cancer survival and in particular to determine whether there is a threshold after which survival is significantly worsened. Methods A prospectively maintained single-institution database containing data from all patients from Jan 2012 to Dec 2020 was analysed. Survival analyses were undertaken to determine the association between lymph node positivity and survival. Results A total of 430 patients underwent surgery for gastro-oesophageal cancer (oesophagectomy: n = 311, 72.3%; gastrectomy n = 119, 27.7%) of which 80.2% were male and the median age was 68 years old (IQR: 61-74). A median of 23 nodes were examined (IQR 18-33) and a median of one lymph node was positive for cancer (IQR 0-3 lymph nodes). The majority of patients (59.3%) had a T3 tumour, 24.0% had T2, and 12.1% had a T1 tumour. Over a median follow up of 30 months (IQR 13-61), 61.2% of the study population were alive. Kaplan Meier analyses demonstrated that patients who had five or more positive nodes had a survival of 36.3 months (IQR: 24.4-48.3 months) compared to those with four or fewer nodes (45.8 months, IQR: 27.6-64.1 months, p > 0.001). Survival did not worsen further with a higher number of positive nodes. Conclusions This study shows that having five or more positive lymph nodes significantly worsens Oesophago-gastric cancer survival. These results may suggest that from the threshold of 5 positive nodes, OG cancer behaves as a systemic disease and thus impact on adjuvant treatment strategies.

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