Abstract
Background: It has been suggested that inadequate lymph node harvest may result in pathologically understaged or indeterminate staging of patients with colorectal cancer (CRC). We compared the adequacy of nodal staging in patients undergoing emergency surgery compared with elective surgery for CRC.
Methods: Using a prospectively collected CRC surgery database at a tertiary care centre, we performed a cohort study. The mean number of lymph nodes harvested and the proportion of patients who had inadequate staging (< 12 nodes harvested) were compared between emergency and elective surgery cohorts. Our analysis was adjusted for tumour site, type of resection, surgical training and pathologic stage.
Results: A total of 1279 of 1356 (94%) enrolled patients had nodal data available for analysis; 161 (13%) patients had emergency surgery and 1118 (87%) had elective surgery. The mean number of nodes removed was higher in the emergency surgery group (mean difference +2.8, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.6–5.1, p = 0.012). The proportion of patients with inadequate nodal staging did not differ between groups (emergent 16%, elective 17%, p = 0.79). The odds of adequate nodal staging, adjusting for site, type of resection, training and stage was no different between groups (OR 0.80, 95% CI 0.47–1.35, p = 0.41).
Conclusion: The evidence does not support the common belief that emergency surgery is more commonly understaged in CRC. Our data suggest emergency surgery resulted in a significant increase in the average number of nodes harvested, with no difference in inadequate nodal staging.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most common cancer in Canada and accounts for the second most cancer-related deaths. An estimated 23 300 Canadians received diagnoses of CRC in 2012, with 9200 succumbing to the disease.1 The accepted management of CRC is complete resection, surgical dissection of the associated lymph node basin and removal of any contiguous organs involved. The common occurrence of CRC and the emphasis of early surgical intervention indicates that management of this disease is, and will remain, a significant part of general surgical practice.
Adjuvant chemotherapy has shown clear improvement in survival and lower recurrence rates in node-positive or stage III disease.2 Adjuvant chemotherapy with fluorouracil plus leucovorin or capecitabine-based regimes is now the standard of care for treatment of stage III disease.3,4 Although some advocate for adjuvant therapy in stage II disease, the evidence is less clear.5 A significant improvement in survival with adjuvant chemotherapy in stage II disease has been elusive, although there may be some benefit in high-risk populations.6
Pathological examination of the resected specimen is an essential step in determining node positivity, cancer stage, indication for the use of adjuvant chemotherapy and patient prognosis. The greater the number of nodes examined, the more confidence can be placed in the reported nodal status of the patient.7 The American Joint Commission on Cancer and the College of American Pathologists recommend examination of a minimum of 12 lymph nodes to accurately diagnose stage II disease.8 This has now become a measure of surgical resection adequacy in stage I–III CRC.
Patients presenting with obstructing or perforated cancers requiring emergent surgery represent a high-risk population with poor outcomes compared to those with nonemergently resected cancers. The cause for decreased survival in this high-risk population has been poorly evaluated in the literature.9 It has been suggested that owing to technical difficulty or instability of the patient, inadequate lymph node harvest may occur, resulting in pathologically understaged or indeterminate staging of the patient. Consequently these patients may not receive the survival benefits of adjuvant chemotherapy, or they may be subjected to unnecessary side effects of chemotherapeutic drugs.10,11
The objective of our study was to compare the adequacy of nodal staging in patients undergoing emergency surgery with those undergoing elective surgery for CRC in a high volume tertiary referral Canadian hospital.
Methods
Database
Patient information was entered prospectively into a database from January 2008 to December 2013. Patient information, surgical information, neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy, pathology information, tumour-node-metastasis (TNM) classification and staging were entered manually. Surgical nature (elective v. emergent) was determined from the operative notes and International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 codes during individual patient data entry. The indication for emergent surgery was not included in the original data set. Quarterly quality assessment data runs and random chart audits were completed to assure accuracy of the data set. We obtained information on pathologic staging and lymph node count from the synoptic pathology reports.
Exposure and outcomes
The primary exposure was the nature of surgery (emergency v. elective surgery). The primary outcome was adequacy of lymph node harvest, with 12 or more nodes considered adequate. In addition, we compared the mean number of nodes harvested between groups.
We explored several factors to determine if they modified the effect of nature of surgery on nodal harvest. These included surgeon subspecialty training (colorectal, surgical oncology, general surgery), tumour site (right, transverse, left, rectum, multiple), type of resection (right hemicolectomy, left hemicolectomy, sigmoid resection, segmental resection, abdominoperineal resection (APR), Hartmann, low anterior resection, subtotal colectomy) and pathologic stage. Owing to location and the expected difference in use between elective and emergent surgery, we grouped low anterior resections, APR and Hartmann procedure together for analysis.
Statistical analysis
We performed all statistical analyses using STATA software version 12.0 (Statacorp).
The crude association between nature of surgery and adequacy of lymph node harvest was determined using a Pearson χ2 test. The difference in means was calculated using analysis of variance between groups. We completed a Mantel–Haenszel analysis to assess the effect of surgeon training, tumour site, type of resection and pathologic stage on the adequacy of lymph node harvest between groups.
We then performed logistic regression analysis to assess the association between adequacy of lymph node harvest and nature of surgery, adjusting for surgeon training, tumour site, type of surgery and pathologic stage. Significance testing was completed using the likelihood ratio test.
Results
Of the 1356 patients enrolled in the database, 1279 patients (94%) had complete pathologic information and were included in this study. Of these, 12.6% required an emergency operation. Patient characteristics can be found in Table 1. Overall, the most common tumour sites were right-sided (29.4%), left-sided or sigmoid (28.9%) or rectal (30.5%). The surgeons’ subspecialties included colorectal training (35.0%), surgical oncology (9.8%) and general surgery (54.9%).
The mean number of nodes harvested and proportion of adequate lymph node sampling can be found in Table 2. The emergency group on average had more lymph nodes sampled than the elective group (mean difference +2.8, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.6–5.1, p = 0.012). There was no difference in the proportion of adequate harvests between the emergency and elective groups (risk ratio 1.01, 95% CI 0.94–1.09, p = 0.79). Furthermore, no trends were identified in the inadequate node harvest data set. The proportion of cases with fewer than 5 nodes and 5–9 nodes harvested were comparable in both emergent and elective groups.
We completed stratified analyses to assess the effect of surgeon training, tumour site, type of resection, pathologic stage and age on the association between adequacy of lymph node harvest and surgical nature (Table 3).
The Mantel–Haenszel analysis revealed that the association between adequacy of lymph node harvest and surgical nature was not influenced by surgical training (test of homogeneity, p = 0.31), tumour site (p = 0.31) type of resection (p = 0.96), pathologic stage (p = 0.45) or age (p = 0.46; Table 4).
A logistic analysis was completed assessing the association between lymph node adequacy and surgical nature, adjusting for surgeon training, tumour site, type of resection, pathologic stage and age. We found no evidence of an association between surgical nature and lymph node harvest, after adjusted analysis. The odds ratio of an adequate resection in the emergency group compared with the elective group was 0.77 (95% CI 0.45–1.31, p = 0.35; Table 4).
Discussion
Our results showed that there was no evidence of a difference in the adequacy of lymph node harvest between elective and emergency surgery. This was true, even after adjusting for age, tumour site, type of resection, surgeon training and pathologic stage.
Strengths and limitations
This study used information from a prospectively collected database of patients with CRC. We had complete nodal information on more than 90% of patients who were included in the study. The accuracy of the pathology reports have been assured and maintained with routine audits. In addition, we had complete information on age, type of resection, tumour site, full pathologic staging and surgeon training. This allowed us to analyze the independent effects of the nature of surgery after adjusting for these potential confounders.
Limitations of the study may include misclassification of the nature of surgery. We extracted the nature of surgery from operative notes. We were unable to further validate the nature of surgery. In addition, the database did not capture the indication for surgery in the emergency group. It is possible that operating for bleeding, obstruction or perforation could affect the adequacy of the lymph node harvest differently. The database included patients who were treated at an academic institution by surgeons with varying levels of training. The results of this study may not translate to the community hospital experience, where training may be similar but volumes and case complexity may be variable. An additional limitation is that adequacy of lymph node harvest can be affected by the reporting pathologist.12 Our database did not distinguish among reporting pathologists, and adequacy of nodal harvest by pathologist was not available.
Strengths and limitations in comparison to previous publications
A previous study by Lewis and colleagues13 examined 296 patients operated for colon cancer, 15% of whom had an emergency operation. Comparing the results from our study and theirs, we found a similar proportion of patients requiring emergency surgery (15% v. 12.6%). The study by Lewis and colleagues did not include patients with rectal cancers. In addition, there was a smaller proportion of inadequate harvest in the elective group in their study compared with ours (11.9% v. 17.0%), but there was no difference in the proportion of inadequate harvest in the emergency group (14.0% v. 16.1%). Univariate analysis in the study by Lewis and colleagues found no association between nature of surgery and adequacy of lymph node harvest (p = 0.70). They did not attempt to adjust for the effects of surgeon training, tumour site, resection type or pathologic stage.
Previous studies have found that specialty training may result in differences in adequacy of node harvest.14,15 In addition, tumour site has previously been found to affect adequacy of nodal harvest.16,17 Our study stratified and then adjusted for these 2 factors as well as resection type and pathologic stage. Even after adjusting for these important factors, we found no difference in the adequacy of nodal harvest.
Population-based studies have identified age as a statistically significant variable affecting adequacy of lymph node resection.18,19 Baxter and colleagues18 studied more than 100 000 patients with invasive colon and rectal cancer. Our results show a similar trend with decreasing rates of adequate lymph node resection with increasing age. The rates of adequate resection are improved compared with these previous findings of Baxter and colleagues in patients younger than 50 (12% v. 45%) and older than 71 years of age (16.9% v. 65%).18 Our stratified analysis assessing the effect of age on adequacy of lymph node resection was not significant when comparing the emergent and elective groups.
Conclusion
Patients undergoing emergency surgery had no difference in the adequacy of nodal staging compared with their elective counterparts. The commonly held belief that inadequate staging occurs more frequently in the emergency group was not supported by our patient population and analysis.
Footnotes
Poster presented at Canadian Surgery Forum 2013, Sept. 19–22; Ottawa, Ont.
Competing interests: None declared.
Contributors: All authors designed the study. M. Brackstone acquired the data, which S. Patel and S. Patel analyzed. S. Patel and S. Patel wrote the article, which all authors reviewed and approved for publication.
- Accepted April 9, 2014.