Influence of factors on long-term survival of stage Ⅰ NSCLC by detection of micrometastatic tumor cells in pNO lymph nodes / 肿瘤研究与临床
Cancer Research and Clinic
;
(6): 386-389, 2009.
Artigo
em Chinês
| WPRIM
| ID: wpr-380545
ABSTRACT
Objective To explore the influence of some factors on long-term survival of postoperative stage Ⅰ NSCLC patients. Methods 91 patients of NSCLC who underwent radical surgery of the primary tumor with dissection of the hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes were diagnosed as stage Ⅰ NSCLC postoperatively by pathology and followed up for 5 years. Its hilar and subcarinal lymph nodes were detected occult micrometastastic tumor cells by immunohistochemistry (SP method) by using the binoclonal antibody multicytokeratin (AE1/AE3) as a micrometastatic marker. To analyse the influence of micrometastasis and the clinicopathologic characteristics on long-term survivals. Results The rate of micromatastasis of stage Ⅰ NSCLC was 49 %. The five-year overall survival rate was 70.3 %. The median of survival time was 48.5months. The rate of metastasis was 32 % and the meantime of relapse and metastasis was 36.6months. Tumor size, differentiation, stage, and micrometastasis were significantly associated with relapse and metastasis (P <0.05). The tumor differentiation, stage, and micrometastasis were found to be significant independent factor on survival in multivariate analysis (P<0.05). Conclusion There was nodal micrometastasis in completely resected stage Ⅰ NSCLC, and the tumor differentiation, stage, and micrometastasis were found to be significant independent factor on survival.
Texto completo:
DisponíveL
Índice:
WPRIM (Pacífico Ocidental)
Tipo de estudo:
Estudo diagnóstico
Idioma:
Chinês
Revista:
Cancer Research and Clinic
Ano de publicação:
2009
Tipo de documento:
Artigo
Similares
MEDLINE
...
LILACS
LIS