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Table 4 Clinicopathological findings of patients with cervical and mediastinal lymph node metastasis

From: Clinicopathological characteristics and optimal management for esophagogastric junctional cancer; a single center retrospective cohort study

Case

Tumor type

Cervical LN

Mediastinal LN

Age

Sex

Tumor size (mm)

Distance

Macroscopic type

Histological type

pT

pN

pM

Stage

Initial recurrence site

Status

1

E (SQ)

SC

64

M

50

65

Type 0

SQ (por)

T3

N3

M0

IIIC

LN, lt. adrenal grand

Deceased

2

E (SQ)

SC

LTP

57

M

87

69

Type 0

SQ (por)

T1

N2

M1

IV

LN

Deceased

3

E (SQ)

EH

72

M

25

40

Type 2

SQ (mod)

T3

N1

M0

IIIA

LN

Deceased

4

E (AD)

EH

73

F

110

100

Type 0

AD (por)

T2

N1

M0

IIB

Peritoneum

Deceased

5

E (AD)

LTP, ID

62

M

45

55

Type 2

AD (mod)

T3

N1

M0

IIIA

LN

Deceased

6

Ge

LTP

68

M

80

30

Type 1

AD (mod)

T3

N3

M0

IIIC

 

Deceased (other cause)

7

Ge

EH

41

M

65

25

Type 3

AD (por)

T3

N3

M1

IV

LN

Alive with relapse

  1. Distance between proximal edge of tumor and EGJ in mm.
  2. AD adenocarcinoma, EH Esophageal hiatus, ID Infradiaphragmatic, LTP Lower thoracic paraesophageal, LN Lymph node, mod moderately differentiated. por: poorly differentiated, SC, Supraclavicular, SQ Squamous-cell carcinoma.