%0 Journal Article %T Lymph node involvement according to lung adenocarcinoma subtypes: lymph node involvement is influenced by lung adenocarcinoma subtypes %A Park, Jae Kil %A Kim, Jae Jun %A Moon, Seok Whan %A Lee, Kyo Young %J Journal of Thoracic Disease %D 2017 %B 2017 %9 %! Lymph node involvement according to lung adenocarcinoma subtypes: lymph node involvement is influenced by lung adenocarcinoma subtypes %K %X Backgrounds: Invasive adenocarcinoma subtypes are known to be associated with prognosis; however, the underlying reason remains unclear. To find out the reason, we investigated the possible influence of lymph node (LN) involvement by the constituent histologic subtypes in the tumor and clarified the different prognosis according to the predominant histologic subtypes in the tumor and LN. Methods: A total of 97 consecutive patients who underwent surgical resection for lung invasive adenocarcinoma between February 2009 and December 2015 were included. We analyzed the associations of the histologic subtypes between the tumor and LN and disease-free survival (DFS) according to the histologic subtypes and predicted the histologic subtype in LN involvement using the component ratio of the predominant histologic subtype in the tumor. A P value Results: Acinar and papillary subtypes occupied the majority of the predominant histological subtypes (tumor 73.2%, LN 71.1%). The tumor showed significantly more constituent histologic subtypes than LN (P Conclusions: The present study presented a possible reason of discrepancies in outcomes according to the lung adenocarcinoma constituent subtypes. Micropapillary and solid predominant subtypes had poorer prognosis than other subtypes, which might be explained by being more prone to LN involvement. %U https://jtd.amegroups.org/article/view/16282 %V 9 %N 10 %P 3903-3910 %@ 2077-6624