Abstract

The aim of this paper is to examine whether intraoperative examination of paratracheal nodes can indicate cervical node dissection and whether this approach is valid. From 1988 to 1997, 76 patients with thoracic esophageal squamous cell carcinoma received esophagectomies with and without cervical lymph node (LN) dissection based on the results of intraoperative pathological diagnosis from selective checking of paratracheal LN. We retrospectively examined the outcomes for the patients and the micro metastasis in the dissected lymph node using cytokeratin staining. Three of the seven patients with cervical LN dissection were detected as having cervical LN metastasis by postoperative hematoxylin-eosin or cytokeratin staining. Five (7%) of the 69 patients without cervical LN dissection had cervical LN recurrence after the operation. Four of the seven patients who were diagnosed as having metastasis or micro metastasis in paratracheal LN by postoperative examination had cervical LN recurrence after the operation. In conclusion, the esophagectomy with and without cervical LN dissection for thoracic esophageal squamous cell carcinoma based on the results of intraoperative pathological diagnosis from selective checking of paratracheal LN was not fully acceptable. The reliability of intraoperative pathological diagnosis of selective checking may improve by increasing the number of checked LN and the detection of micro metastasis.

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