Clinicopathological and prognostic significance of high circulating lymphocyte ratio in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy for advanced gastric cancer

2018 
This study was designed to investigate the prognostic value of circulating blood cell counts and subsets for patients with advanced gastric cancer (AGC) treated with neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) and the factors determining pathological complete response (pCR). In 112 patients with AGC, we retrospectively examined the ratios of lymphocyte, monocyte, and neutrophil during and after NAC before surgery, and the percentages of CD3+, CD3+ CD4+, CD3+ CD8+ and CD4+/CD8+ lymphocytes as well. We also investigated their associations with the pCR rate and overall survival (OS). The ratios of lymphocyte taken before and after NAC were significantly greater in forty-four pCR cases than that in sixty-eight non-pCR cases. During NAC, the proportion of lymphocyte and the percentages of CD3+, CD3+ CD4+, and CD3+ CD8+ lymphocytes were dramatically increased in pCR group. The lymphocyte ratio showed an independent association with pCR by multivariate analysis and maintained at a relatively high level in pCR cases. By mean of 31.53% lymphocyte ratio before-NAC and 41.68% after-NAC, cases with high lymphocyte ratio showed significantly better outcome in OS. High circulating lymphocyte ratios, both before and after NAC, are positively associated with pCR and improved OS in advanced gastric cancer, which may be considered as a new prognostic biomarker.
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