Improved Survival For Colon Cancer Patients Linked To Lymph Node Evaluation
Main Category: Colorectal CancerArticle Date: 26 Mar 2007 - 14:00 PDT
The number of lymph nodes removed and examined for tumor cells appears to be associated with the likelihood of survival after surgery in colon cancer patients, according to a study in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Health care providers should consider the number of lymph nodes that were removed and evaluated when examining the quality of care that colon cancer patients receive, according to the paper's authors.
Lymph node evaluation is important for determining the prognosis and future treatment of patients with colon cancer because the greater the number of lymph nodes that contain cancer cells, the more likely it is that the cancer will return. But most patients do not get an adequate number of lymph nodes tested. Some experts currently recommend that at least 12 lymph nodes be examined.
George Chang, M.D., of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, and colleagues reviewed studies in four major medical databases to see if there was evidence for an association between lymph node evaluation and survival rates for colon cancer patients. They looked at 17 studies from nine countries. Sixteen of the studies found that an increased number of lymph nodes evaluated was associated with improved survival rates for patients with stage II colon cancer. Four of the six studies that included patients with stage III colon cancer had similar findings.
"Recent reports have found that few patients in the United States, Canada, France, The Netherlands, or Sweden are undergoing an adequate lymph node evaluation," the authors write. "Given the results in our systematic review, efforts to improve lymph node evaluation should result in clinically significant improvements in outcome and also the quality of care for patients with colon cancer."
In an accompanying editorial, Rocco Ricciardi, M.D., of Tufts University and the Lahey Clinic in Boston, and Nancy Baxter, M.D., of the University of Toronto, call attention to the many questions that must be addressed before any quality of care standards are put into place. "Simple solutions for quality improvement (such as setting quality benchmarks for [the] number of lymph nodes evaluated in colon cancer) are attractive to policy makers and payers," the authors write. "However, if such solutions are not based on sound evidence, they are likely to fail to achieve improvements in patient outcomes and, worse, may divert attention from effective strategies."
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Contact:
* Article: Laura Sussman, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
* Editorial: Nancy Baxter, University of Toronto
Citation:
* Article: Chang GJ, Rodriguez-Bigas MA, Skibber JM, Moyer VA. Lymph Node Evaluation and Survival After Curative Resection of Colon Cancer: Systematic Review. J Natl Cancer Inst; 2007; 99: 433-441
* Editorial: Ricciardi R, Baxter NN. Association Versus Causation Versus Quality Improvement: Setting Benchmarks for Lymph Node Evaluation in Colon Cancer. J Natl Cancer Inst; 2007; 99: 414-415
Note: The Journal of the National Cancer Institute is published by Oxford University Press and is not affiliated with the National Cancer Institute. Attribution to the Journal of the National Cancer Institute is requested in all news coverage.
Contact: Liz Savage
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
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Pathological Examination Technique To Detect More Lymph Nodes
posted by Richard A. Smith MD PhD on 27 Mar 2007 at 7:31 amOur surgical oncologist has been very interested in the number of nodes we find during gross pathologic examination of colon resection specimens. Some years ago, we read a report in the literature (Newell KJ et al. Arch Path Lab Med 125:642-645, 2001)about a fixative mixture called GEWF which greatly enhances the visibility of nodes in pericolonic adipose the the prosector. The solution is a mixture of 10 parts absolute ethanol, 3.4 parts distilled water, 1.6 parts formaldehyde and 1 part glacial acetic acid. Lymph nodes become firm and white against the yellow adipose after overnight fixation. As many as 30 lymph nodes become visible after this technique, many as small as 1 mm. There is some cell shrinkage, but morphology is acceptable for distinguishing tumor metastases.
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