Volume 132, Issue 4 pp. 944-950
Epidemiology

Site-specific cancer deaths in cancer of unknown primary diagnosed with lymph node metastasis may reveal hidden primaries

K. Hemminki

Corresponding Author

K. Hemminki

Division of Molecular Genetic Epidemiology, German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany

Center for Primary Health Care Research, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden

Tel.: +49-6221-421800, Fax: +49-6221-421810

Division of Molecular Genetic Epidemiology, German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ), Heidelberg 69120, GermanySearch for more papers by this author
M. Bevier

M. Bevier

Division of Molecular Genetic Epidemiology, German Cancer Research Centre (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany

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J. Sundquist

J. Sundquist

Center for Primary Health Care Research, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden

Stanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA

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A. Hemminki

A. Hemminki

Cancer Gene Therapy Group, Molecular Cancer Biology Program & Transplantation Laboratory & Haartman Institute & Finnish Institute for Molecular Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

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First published: 22 June 2012
Citations: 21

Abstract

Cancer of unknown primary site (CUP) is a fatal cancer ranking among the five most common cancer deaths. CUP is diagnosed through metastases, which are limited to lymph nodes in some patients. Cause-specific survival data could guide the search for hidden primary tumors and help with therapeutic choices. The CUP patients were identified from the Swedish Cancer Registry between 1987 and 2008; 1,444 patients had only lymph node metastasis of defined histology (adenocarcinoma, squamous cell or undifferentiated). Site-specific cancer deaths were analyzed by lymph node location and histology. Kaplan-Meier survival curves were compared with metastatic primary cancer at related sites. Among the patients with metastasis to head and neck lymph nodes, 117 (59.1% of the specific cancer deaths) died of lung tumors. Patients with axillary lymph node metastasis died of lung and breast tumors in equal proportions (40.2% each). Also, squamous cell CUP in head and neck lymph nodes was mainly associated with lung tumor deaths (53.1%). With a few exceptions, survival of CUP patients with lymph node metastasis was indistinguishable from survival of patients with metastatic primary cancer originating from the organs drained by those nodes. The association between lymph node CUP metastases with cancer deaths in the drained organ and the superimposable survival kinetics suggests that drained organs host hidden primaries. Importantly, half of all site-specific cancer deaths (266/530) were due to lung tumors. Thus, an intense search should be mounted to find lung cancer in CUP patients with lymph node metastases.

Abstract

What's new?

Cancer of unknown primary site (CUP) has a high rate of mortality. If the primary site of these metastases could be identified more often, patients could receive more effective treatment. The data in this study support the hypothesis that metastases to the lymph nodes in CUP often originate in the organs that drain into those lymph nodes. The authors also found that lung cancer was frequently the cause of death in CUP, and they stress the importance of thoroughly investigating the lung as a primary source of CUP.

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