Lymphatic Invasion Might Be Considered as an Upstaging Factor in N0 and N1 Gastric Cancer

J Clin Med. 2020 Apr 28;9(5):1275. doi: 10.3390/jcm9051275.

Abstract

(Background) The aim of this study was to investigate the prognostic impact of lymphatic invasion in gastric cancer, focusing on survival differences between N stage groups. (Methods) A total of 398 consecutive patients who underwent curative gastrectomy for primary gastric adenocarcinoma from January 2006 to December 2015 were analyzed retrospectively using data from a prospectively collected registry database. We compared various clinicopathological features and survival differences between lymphatic invasion-positive and -negative groups. (Results) Of the 398 patients, 141 (35.4%) showed lymphatic invasion. The lymphatic invasion-positive subgroup had poorer prognosis than the lymphatic invasion-negative subgroup in N0 (five-year survival rate: 87.8% vs. 73.6%, p = 0.048) and N1 (87.2% vs. 50%, p = 0.007) stage patients. The odds ratio (OR) of lymphatic invasion to five-year survival rate was 2.078 (95% confidence interval (CI), 1.103-3.916; p = 0.024). The presence of lymphatic invasion had worse effect on survival than age (OR, 1.807; 95% CI, 1.024-2.242; p = 0.029) or tumor depth (OR, 1.286; 95% CI, 1.078-1.897; p = 0.013) in N0 and N1 stage patients. The overall survival of patients with lymphatic invasion was not different from that of patients at a one-higher N stage without lymphatic invasion at any N stage. (Conclusions) The presence of lymphatic invasion may be the most important independent prognostic factor in N0 and N1 gastric cancer and might be an upstaging factor of N stage at any N stage. Therefore, in addition to the number of metastasized lymph nodes, the presence of lymphatic invasion should be included in N stage determination.

Keywords: gastric carcinoma; lymphatic invasion; prognosis.