Abstract
BackgroundSystemic inflammation and immune response play crucial roles in tumor growth; neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) is a known systemic inflammatory scoring system. Previous studies have reported that NLR is a prognostic biomarker in various human cancers. The aim of this study was to determine whether the NLR predicts tumor recurrence in patients with stage I-II rectal cancer after curative resection. MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed 130 consecutive patients with stage I-II rectal cancer who underwent curative resection between January 2006 and March 2015 at our institution without any preoperative treatment. We investigated whether clinicopathologic factors including NLR were associated with cancer recurrence after curative surgery. ResultsThere were four cases (3.1%) of cancer-specific deaths and 16 cases (12.3%) of recurrence; the 5-year disease-free survival rate was 85.6%. NLR, pathologic T-category, and lymphatic invasion were significantly associated with disease-free survival. Multivariate analysis further showed that these three factors were independently associated with disease-free survival. ConclusionsPreoperative NLR could predict tumor relapse in stage I-II rectal cancer and might be a useful biomarker for predicting recurrence in patients undergoing curative resection.
Published Version
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