| Literature DB >> 15483342 |
Yong Soo Choi1, Young Mog Shim, Kwhanmien Kim, Jhingook Kim.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to evaluate the pattern of recurrence after complete resection of pathological stage I, II non-small cell lung cancer, especially according to the cell type. We reviewed the clinical records of 525 patients operated on for pathologic stage I and II lung cancer. The histologic type was found to be squamous in 253 and non-squamous in 229 patients. Median follow-up period was 40 months. Recurrences were identified in 173 (36%) of 482 enrolled patients; distant metastasis in 70%, distant and local recurrence in 11%, and local recurrence in 19%. Distant metastasis was more common in non-squamous than in squamous cell carcinoma (p=0.044). Brain metastasis was more frequently identified in non-squamous than in squamous cell carcinoma (24.2% vs. 7.3%. p=0.005). Multivariate analyses showed that cell type is the significant risk factor for recurrence-free survival in stage I and stage II non-small cell lung cancer. Recurrence-free survival curves showed that non-squamous cell carcinoma had similar risks during early periods of follow-up and more risks after 2 yr from the operation compared to squamous cell carcinoma. Pathological stage and histologic type significantly influence recurrence-free survival.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2004 PMID: 15483342 PMCID: PMC2816329 DOI: 10.3346/jkms.2004.19.5.674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Korean Med Sci ISSN: 1011-8934 Impact factor: 2.153
Clinicopathological characteristics of 355 stage I and 127 stage II patients
SqC, squamous cell carcinoma.
Univariate analyses of recurrence-free survival
RFS, recurrence-free survival.
Multivariate correlates of recurrence-free survival
CI, confidence interval; SqC, squamous cell carcinoma.
Fig. 1Recurrence-free survival according to the cell type in stage I patients.
Fig. 2Recurrence-free survival according to the cell type in stage II patients.