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Table 1 Basic characteristics of clinicopathological features of patients with different monocyte counts

From: High postoperative monocyte indicates inferior Clinicopathological characteristics and worse prognosis in lung adenocarcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma after lobectomy

Category

N (%)

Preoperative monocyte (109/L)

Postoperative monocyte (109/L)

< 0.375

≥0.375

< 0.845

≥0.845

Gender

 Male

278(64.2%)

122

156

155

123

 Female

155(35.8%)

128

27

116

39

Age

433(100%)

61.08 ± 9.74

59.9 ± 10.47

60.2 ± 10.05

61.21 ± 10.08

Smoking history

 Yes

258(59.7%)

115

143

148

110

 No

174(40.3%)

135

39

123

51

Location

 Left superior

128(29.6%)

74

54

80

48

 Left inferior

62(14.3)

39

23

40

22

 Right superior

128(29.6%)

79

49

80

48

 Right middle

44(10.2)

24

20

24

20

 Right inferior

71(16.4%)

34

37

47

24

Procedure

 VATS

221(51%)

139

82

148

73

 Thoracotomy

212(49%)

111

101

123

89

T stage

 T1

84(19.4%)

58

26

50

34

 T2

279(64.4%)

161

118

178

101

 T3

55(12.7%)

26

29

31

24

 T4

15(3.5%)

5

10

12

3

N stage

 N0

268(62.0%)

158

110

184

84

 N1

71(16.4%)

35

36

42

29

 N2

93(21.5%)

56

37

45

48

Stage

 I

205(47.3%)

126

79

139

66

 II

107(24.7%)

59

48

68

39

 IIIA

121(27.9%)

65

56

64

57

Histological type

 Adenocarcinoma

259(59.8%)

181

78

168

91

 Squamous carcinoma

174(40.2%)

69

105

103

71

Differentiation

 Well

11(2.6%)

8

3

9

2

 Moderate

261(61.7%)

155

106

159

102

 Poor

151(35.7%)

80

71

98

53

  1. T stage tumour, N stage node, VATS Video-assistant thoracoscopic surgery, N cases sample size
  2. aSignificance of Fisher’s exact test, X2-test or t-test. P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant