Background: Gallbladder carcinoma (GBC) is a cancer of the digestive tract with poor prognosis, for which surgical resection is the only potentially curative therapy. The prognostic value of postoperative peripheral blood leukocyte subset count in patients with cancer has not been fully investigated. Therefore, we retrospectively investigated the relation-ship between postoperative peripheral blood lymphocyte count and disease-free as well as overall survival after radical resection of GBC.
Patients and methods: The study subjects were 34 patients who underwent radical resection for GBC between January 2005 and April 2010. We retrospectively investigated the relation-ship between clinicopathological variables, including postoperative peripheral blood lymphocyte count, and disease-free as well as overall survival.
Results: In univariate analysis, disease-free survival was worse in patients with intraoperative blood transfusion (p=0.0285), tumor node metastasis (TNM) stage ≥II (p<0.0001), and lymphocyte count of less than 1,000/μl (p=0.0002). Overall survival was worse in patients with TNM stage ≥II (p=0.0002) and lymphocyte count of less than 1,000/μl (p=0.0151). In multivariate analysis, TNM stage ≥II (p<0.0089) and peripheral blood lymphocyte count of less than 1,000/μl (p=0.0365) were independent predictors of poor disease-free survival. For overall survival, TNM stage ≥II (p=0.0230) was the only independent predictor. Moreover, lymphocyte counts of less than 1,000/μl correlated significantly with TNM stage ≥II, duration of operation, greater blood loss, and presence of intraoperative blood transfusion.
Conclusion: Postoperative peripheral blood lymphocyte count correlates with outcome of patients with GBC treated by radical resection.
Keywords: Gallbladder carcinoma; lymphocyte count; operation; prognosis.