Available online 2 April 2026, 102414
Author links open overlay panel, , , , , , , , , Highlights•Tumor biology and comorbidity drive survival following surgery for small bowel NETs outweighing surgical metrics such as lymph node ratio and lymph node yield. Surveillance should therefore prioritize biological markers over nodal counts.
AbstractBackgroundSmall-bowel neuroendocrine tumours (SBNETs) frequently involve mesenteric lymph nodes. While guidelines suggest minimum lymph node yields (LNY), the independent prognostic relevance of LNY and lymph node ratio (LNR) regarding recurrence remains uncertain in contemporary cohorts.
MethodsA retrospective analysis of 102 patients undergoing R0/R1 resection for SBNETs (2005–2023) at a single tertiary institution was conducted. The primary outcome was overall survival (OS), and time to recurrence (TTR) was analyzed as a secondary endpoint, with the caveat that recurrence detection is sensitive to surveillance frequency and patient presentation. Literature-informed thresholds (LNY >8, LNR ≤0.46) were applied and validated using exploratory cut-point analysis. Predictors of outcome were assessed using Kaplan–Meier survival analysis and multivariable Cox and logistic regression models.
ResultsAt a median follow-up of 8.1 years, the 5-year overall survival (OS) for the entire cohort was 86.0%. On multivariable analysis, older age (HR 1.39; p = 0.037) and higher Charlson Comorbidity Index (HR 1.17; p = 0.093) were the primary drivers of mortality. In contrast, surgical nodal metrics (LNY and LNR) were not independent predictors of OS. Secondary analysis showed that in the localized subgroup (stage I-III), the median TTR was not reached, and the 5-year TTR rate was 73.7%. Independent predictors of recurrence/progression were higher Charlson Comorbidity Index (OR 1.90 per point; p<0.001), younger age (OR 0.93 per year; p<0.001), and higher Ki-67 index (OR 1.36 per %; p=0.011).
ConclusionsIn this cohort, adequate lymphadenectomy (>8 nodes) assisted staging. However, nodal metrics were not statistically significant predictors of recurrence or survival after multivariable adjustment, reflecting the dominant influence of tumor biology (Ki-67) and patient comorbidity (as reflected by the CCI score) on overall survival. Prognostication and surveillance strategies should prioritize biological markers and patient factors over surgical nodal metrics alone.
KeywordsSmall-bowel neuroendocrine tumour
emergency surgery
lymphadenectomy
R0 resection
survival
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