Relationship between tumor dna ploidy and regional lymph node changes in lung cancer

Abstract
Seventy-four patients with lung cancer, resected consecutively from April 1989 to August 1990, were divided into (1) 21 with diploid tumors having a single G0/G1 peak and a coefficient of variation (CV) of 4.9 or less, (2) 18 with peridiploid tumors having a single G0/G1 peak and a CV at 5.0 or more, and (3) 35 with aneuploid tumors having multiple G0/G1 peaks. Aneuploid tumors had higher frequencies of lymphatic invasion and metastasis to the mediastinal lymph nodes. To evaluate the relationship between ploidy tumor status and immunologic competence of the regional lymph nodes, histologic findings and the proportion of killer T-lymphocytes were examined in the dissected lymph nodes. Aneuploid tumors had significantly lower proportions of paracortical hyperplasia and killer T-lymphocytes than did diploid and peridiploid ones in the nonmetastatic lymph nodes of N0 and N1 disease. These findings suggest the possibility that a decline in the antitumor competence of these lymph nodes could cause metastasis to the nodes. The recurrence rates were 19% in diploid, 33% in peridiploid, and 54% in aneuploid tumors, and the 2-year survival rates were 87%, 78%, and 44%, respectively. Peridiploid tumors showed intermediate values between diploid and aneuploid in terms of immunologic competence, recurrence rate, and survival. They were assumed to have a different proportion of aneuploid cells than the other two.