Background
In colorectal surgery UICC/AJCC criteria require a yield of 12 or more locoregional lymph nodes for adequate staging. Neoadjuvant
radiochemotherapy for rectal carcinoma reduces the number of lymph nodes in the resection specimen; the prognostic impact
of this reduced lymph node yield has not been determined.
Methods
One hundred two patients with uT3 rectal carcinoma who were receiving neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy were compared with 114
patients with uT3 rectal carcinoma who were receiving primary surgery followed by adjuvant radiochemotherapy. Total lymph
node yield and number of tumor-positive lymph nodes were determined and correlated with survival.
Results
After neoadjuvant radiochemotherapy both total lymph node yield (12.9 vs. 21.4, p < 0.0001) and number of tumor-positive lymph nodes (1.0 vs. 2.3, p = 0.014) were significantly lower than after primary surgery plus adjuvant radiochemotherapy. Reduced total lymph node yield
in neoadjuvantly treated patients had no prognostic impact, with overall survival of patients with 12 or more lymph nodes
the same as that of patients with less than 12 lymph nodes. Overall survival of neoadjuvantly treated patients was significantly
influenced by the number of tumor-positive lymph nodes with 5-year-survival rates of 88, 63, and 39% for 0, 1–3, and more
than 3 positive lymph nodes (p < 0.0001).
Conclusion
The UICC/AJCC criterion of a total lymph node yield of 12 or more should be revised for rectal carcinoma patients.
D. Doll and R. Gertler contributed equally to this work.