Abstract

IntroductionNodal micrometastasis is a negative prognosticator for esophageal cancer. There is a trend toward endoscopic resection for early cancer of the esophagus without lymphadenectomy. Frequency and prognostic impact of nodal micrometastasis in early cancer of the esophagus have not been investigated so far. Patients and methodsThis study includes 69 patients with a pT1-stage cancer of the esophagus (SCC: n = 26, AC: n = 43), who underwent transthoracic en-bloc esophagectomy with D2-lympadenectomy between 1996 and 2004. On routine histopathological analysis 48 patients were diagnosed as pN0. Lymph nodes (n = 1344) of these patients were further examined for the presence of isolated tumor cells with the monoclonal anti-epithelial antibody AE1/AE3. ResultsIn lymph nodes of 7 (14.6%) out of 48 pN0-patients a positive staining for AE1/AE3 as a sign for nodal micrometastasis was found. In these patients the tumor has infiltrated the submucosal layer. In patients with tumors restricted to mucosal layer (n = 20) no nodal micrometastasis was present. 5-year survival of pN0-patients with nodal micrometastasis was inferior compared to pN0-patients (57% vs. 82%; p = 0.002). ConclusionAlmost 15% of patients with pT1 N0 M0 carcinoma of the esophagus and only those with submucosal infiltration show nodal micrometastasis. It has a significant negative impact on survival already in early esophageal cancer.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call