Appraisal of surgical resection of gallbladder cancer with special reference to lymph node dissection
- PMID: 11201006
- DOI: 10.1007/s004230000163
Appraisal of surgical resection of gallbladder cancer with special reference to lymph node dissection
Abstract
Background: Radical lymph node dissection in surgery for advanced gallbladder cancer is controversial. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the role of lymph node dissection based on the clinico-pathologic results.
Patients: Seventy-three patients who underwent radical surgery including systematic dissection of the N1+N2 region lymph node plus some of the para-aortic nodes were reviewed.
Results: pT1 patients had no lymph node metastasis, but pT2 and pT3/pT4 patients had lymph node metastasis at a rate of 50.0% (13/26) and 83.3% (25/30), respectively. As infiltration of the hepatoduodenal ligament (Binf) became severe, the rate and extent of lymph node metastasis increased. There were four 5-year survivors with lymph node involvement. The 5-year survival rates are 77.0% in pN0 cases and 27.3% in pN1 cases (P<0.01). There was no difference in survival between pN1 and pN2 patients. However, significant differences in survival were observed between pN0/1 and pN2/3 patients when these patients were limited to Binf0/1. Examination of the recurrence pattern showed that most patients with pN0/1/2 had no regional lymph node recurrence, but there was para-aortic lymph node recurrence in patients with pN3 outside the dissected region. Significant prognostic factors influencing survival after surgery by multivariate analysis were pN2/3, pT, and residual tumor.
Conclusion: Systematic lymph node dissection of N1, N2, and part of the para-aortic region improves survival in advanced gallbladder cancer patients, especially in those without either para-aortic lymph node metastases or Binf2/3.
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