Griffiths Ewen A, Brummell Zoe, Gorthi Ganesh, Pritchard Susan A, Welch Ian McL
Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, South Manchester University Hospitals NHS Trust, Wythenshawe, Manchester, United Kingdom.
J Surg Oncol. 2006 Mar 15;93(4):258-67. doi: 10.1002/jso.20449.
Gastrointestinal specialists generally feel that long esophageal tumors carry a worse prognosis and are likely to be more advanced than shorter lesions. Our aim was to investigate the relationship between histologically determined tumor length and aspects of tumor pathology and survival for patients with resected esophageal malignancy.
Three hundred and nine patients who underwent esophageal resection with curative intent in our unit between 1994 and 2003 were retrospectively analyzed. Pathological details such as TNM stage, differentiation, completeness of surgical resection, and overall stage were collected. Survival data were obtained for each patient and univariate and multivariate analyses were performed. Overall survival was used as the primary endpoint.
There were 225 adenocarcinomas, 72 squamous cell carcinomas, and 12 other tumor types with a median tumor length of 3.5 cm (range 0.5-14 cm). Tumor length greater than 3.5 cm was associated with increasing T stage (P = 0.0001), N stage (P = 0.032), overall stage (P = 0.003), and involvement of the longitudinal resection margins (P = 0.02). Univariate analysis found tumor length greater than 3.5 cm was associated with worse overall survival compared with shorter tumors (P = 0.0002). Tumor length remained a significant prognostic factor on multivariate analysis (P = 0.04). Other prognostic factors on multivariate analysis were age, tumor differentiation, nodal involvement, and resection margin status.
Tumor length greater than 3.5 cm (as determined histologically) is associated with worse disease stage and poor overall patient survival. If preoperative endoscopic tumor length bears a similar relationship, this could assist in patient selection for appropriate treatments.
胃肠病专家普遍认为,较长的食管肿瘤预后较差,且可能比短病变更晚期。我们的目的是研究经组织学确定的肿瘤长度与食管恶性肿瘤切除患者的肿瘤病理学及生存方面之间的关系。
回顾性分析了1994年至2003年间在我们科室接受根治性食管切除术的309例患者。收集了TNM分期、分化程度、手术切除完整性及总体分期等病理细节。获取了每位患者的生存数据并进行单因素和多因素分析。总生存作为主要终点。
有225例腺癌、72例鳞状细胞癌和12例其他肿瘤类型,肿瘤中位长度为3.5 cm(范围0.5 - 14 cm)。肿瘤长度大于3.5 cm与T分期增加(P = 0.0001)、N分期增加(P = 0.032)、总体分期增加(P = 0.003)及纵向切缘受累相关(P = 0.02)。单因素分析发现,与较短肿瘤相比,肿瘤长度大于3.5 cm与较差的总生存相关(P = 0.0002)。多因素分析中肿瘤长度仍是一个显著的预后因素(P = 0.04)。多因素分析中的其他预后因素包括年龄、肿瘤分化程度、淋巴结受累情况及切缘状态。
肿瘤长度大于3.5 cm(经组织学确定)与更差的疾病分期及患者总生存不良相关。如果术前内镜下肿瘤长度有类似关系,这可能有助于选择合适治疗的患者。