4.6 Article

Reciprocity between lymphadenectomy quality and adjuvant chemotherapy compliance in gastric cancer: post hoc analysis of two randomized controlled trials

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00464-022-09300-z

Keywords

Gastric cancer; Lymph node noncompliance; Adjuvant chemotherapy noncompliance; Prognosis

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Funding

  1. Scientific and technological innovation joint capital projects of Fujian Province [2017Y9011, 2017Y9004, 2019Y9098]
  2. Fujian Medical University [2019QH1052]

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Intraoperative lymph node dissection and postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy have a significant impact on the overall survival of gastric cancer patients. Major lymph node noncompliance and adjuvant chemotherapy noncompliance lead to poorer prognosis. Adjuvant chemotherapy can improve prognosis in the case of nonmajor lymph node noncompliance during surgery.
Objective To investigate the effect of intraoperative lymph node (LN) dissection and postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy on the overall survival (OS) of gastric cancer (GC) patients and their reciprocity. Methods LN noncompliance was defined as the absence of more than one LN station, as described in the protocol for D2 lymphadenectomy in the Japanese Gastric Cancer Association. The definition of adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) noncompliance was that the chemotherapy planned dose does not meet the requirements. Results Kaplan-Meier survival curves showed that the OS of patients with major LN noncompliance was significantly lower than that of patients with nonmajor LN noncompliance, and the OS of AC noncompliance patients was significantly lower than that of AC compliance patients. If there was nonmajor LN noncompliance during surgery, the OS of patients with AC compliance was significantly higher than that of patients with AC noncompliance (P = 0.035). In the case of major LN noncompliance during surgery, there was no statistically significant difference in OS between those with AC compliance and those with AC noncompliance (P = 0.682). Multivariate Cox regression analysis including AC noncompliance indicated that major LN noncompliance was an independent prognostic factor for poor OS (P = 0.012), while AC noncompliance was not an independent prognostic factor for OS (P = 0.609). Conclusion Adequate lymph node dissection and adjuvant chemotherapy are both key steps to improve the awful prognosis of GC patients. Adjuvant chemotherapy may fail to remedy the poor prognosis caused by major LN noncompliance.

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