Literature DB >> 25013365

Risk factors for major adverse events of video-assisted thoracic surgery lobectomy for lung cancer.

Jie Yang1, Yan Xia1, Yang Yang1, Zheng-Zheng Ni1, Wen-Xin He1, Hai-Feng Wang1, Xiao-Xiong Xu1, Yu-Ling Yang1, Ke Fei1, Ge-Ning Jiang1.   

Abstract

AIMS: The purpose of this study was to identify the risk factors for major adverse events of VATS (Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery) lobectomy for primary lung cancer.
METHODS: 1806 Patients (1032 males, 57.1%) planned to undergo VATS lobectomy for stage IA-IIIA lung cancer from July 2007 to June 2012. The Thoracic Morbidity and Mortality Classification TM&M system was used to evaluate the presence and severity of complications. Postoperative complications were observed during a 30-day follow up. Univariate and multivariate analysis were used to analyze the independent risk factors for major adverse events.
RESULTS: Successful rate of VATS lobectomy was 97.6% (1763/1806). Major complications occurred in 129 patients (7.3%), with a mortality of 0.3% (5/1763). Pulmonary complications contribute up to 90.7% of the major complications and 80% of mortality. Logistic regression indicated that comorbidities, elder age ≥70y, operative time ≥240min and hybrid VATS were predictors for major adverse events (P<0.05). Hybrid and converted VATS lobectomy result in higher major adverse events compared with complete VATS, 15.1%, 20.9% and 7.4% respectively (P=0.013).
CONCLUSIONS: The overall complication rate and mortality of VATS lobectomy are low, while major complications sometimes occur. Pulmonary complications are the most common major complications and cause of mortality. Age ≥70y, comorbidities, operative time ≥240min and Hybrid VATS are predictors of major adverse events.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Lobectomy; Major Adverse Events; Non-small cell lung cancer; Risk factor; VATS

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25013365      PMCID: PMC4081307          DOI: 10.7150/ijms.8912

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Sci        ISSN: 1449-1907            Impact factor:   3.738


Introduction

With the widespread use of early screening tools such as multi-slice spiral computed tomography (CT) and positron emission tomography (PET), more and more early staged lung cancers have been detected and treated with surgery. As a minimal invasive operation, video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) has been more and more widely used for the treatment of lung cancer. But indications for the VATS lobectomy vary for different surgeons. How to choose surgical approach still remains a problem for marginal cases. Although complications of VATS lobectomy are at a low level, there is still certain degree of complications and mortality for the procedure1-5. Besides, currently, most of published studies have only taken the presence of complications into account, without concern of the severity, making the conclusion less objective. It is of great importance to make an objective and accurate evaluation and identify the risk factors of complications. In this retrospective analysis, we use the TM&M system to grade complications and investigated predictors for major complications and mortality after VATS lobectomy for primary lung cancer6,7.

Patients and Methods

Patients

The study was approved by the ethics committee of Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital. A total of 1806 consecutive patients underwent VATS lobectomy for stage IA-IIIA primary lung cancer between July 2007 and June 2012 in our department. All patients received thorough examinations including abdominal ultrasonography or CT scan, whole-body radionuclide bone scanning, PET-CT and head CT or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to exclude distant metastasis. Mediastinoscope or endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) was performed when chest CT scan indicated N3 diseases. Indications for VATS lobectomy included: no ipsilateral thoracotomy history; no evidence of severe pleural adhesions; resectable lesions ≤5cm; no clinical sign of multiple N2 metastases. Surgeon experience and preference were also relative indications. Preoperative discussion of each case was mandatory. All patients' clinical data were presented to evaluate the safety and efficiency at the routine meetings every Tuesday and Friday morning. The leading group made up of 4 most experienced surgeons in our department would authority the surgery and applicable approach. This series included consecutive patients whom preoperative intention was to resect with VATS procedure. Exclusion criteria included: Patients with a history of neoadjuvant chemotherapy or radiotherapy, procedures other than lobectomy, such as wedge, segmentectomy, bilobectomy, pneumonectomy, or chest wall resection. All patients were restaged according to the 7th edition of TNM classification.

VATS Technique

Under general anesthesia, double-lumen endotracheal intubation with selective contralateral lung ventilation was achieved. A 30 degree high definition thoracoscope was recommended. 3 ports were used for most of the operations. Complete VATS lobectomy was defined as finishing the whole procedure using only the vision of a monitor and without rib spreading. Surgery employing direct version or rib distractor was defined as Hybrid VATS. Complete VATS was applied in most cases, hybrid VATS or conversion to thoracotomy were performed whenever the performance of complete VATS was considered to be challenging. Aspirator, electrocautery, electrotome or long scissor was used to separate lung tissue up to surgeon's preference. Staples were used to divide vein, fissures and bronchus. Staples or silk ligature were used to divide artery. After completion of lobectomy, specimen retrieval was performed using an endoscopic retrieval bag. The patients would undergo systematic mediastinal lymph node dissection if the frozen section indicated malignant.

Complication and Classification

A complication was defined as any deviation from normal postoperative course. Perioperative mortality was defined as death during the same hospitalization as surgery or within 30 days after the procedure. All the complications were graded according to TM&M system (Table 1), in which the complication grade of individuals was evaluated according to the most severe complication of each patient. Grade I and II complications were defined as minor complications, grade III and IV were defined as major complications, and grade V was mortality. Major complications and mortality were described as major adverse events. The Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (version 4.03) published by National Institute of Health was also used to refine a number of definitions8.
Table 1

TM&M Classification of Complications for Thoracic Surgery

GradeDefinition
ComplicationAny deviation from the normal postoperative course
Minor
Grade IAny complication without need for pharmacologic treatment or other intervention
Grade IIAny complication that requires pharmacologic treatment or minor intervention only
Major
Grade IIIAny complication that requires surgical, radiologic, endoscopic intervention, or multitherapy
IIIaIntervention does not require general anesthesia
IIIbIntervention requires general anesthesia
Grade IVAny complication requiring intensive care unit management and life support
IVaSingle organ dysfunction
IVbMultiorgan dysfunction
Mortality
Grade VAny complication leading to the death of the patient

Data Collection

Preoperative protocols were obtained from the medical history. Operation database was reviewed and all relevant information was collected in detail. Patient's general information, findings on auxiliary examinations, comorbidities, and pathological diagnosis were collected. Variables recorded included age, sex, smoking, body mass index (BMI), comorbidities, predicted FEV1% (forced expiratory volume in 1 second, FEV1), tumor size, nodal status, and histologic characteristics. Comorbidities included coronary artery disease, hypertension, cerebral vascular event, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic renal insufficiency, and diabetes mellitus. One pack year of smoking would mean that someone had smoked one package of cigarettes (20 cigarettes) daily for one year.

Statistical Analysis

SPSS 18.0 software (SPSS Inc, Chicago, IL) was used for the data analysis. χ2 test was used to compare categorical variables; t test and non-parametric test were used to compare continuous variables. For predictors of complications, univariate analysis was applied for possible variables that may influence complications. A multivariable logistic analysis was then performed using variables with a univariate P value less than 0.1. And a P value of less than 0.05 was considered to indicate statistical significance.

Results

Patient Characteristics

Among 1806 patients, 1763 patients with a mean age of (59.1±10.5) years (range from 19 to 89) underwent VATS lobectomy successfully. The mean operative time was (181±57)min, with an estimated blood loss of (206±352) ml. Nearly 90% of procedures could be finished in less than 240 min with less than 600 ml blood loss. Patient characteristics are shown in table 2. These patients were eligible for analysis of risk factors for major adverse events. Conversion cases were not included when analyzing risk factors of VATS lobectomy.
Table 2

Patient Characteristics

VariableN%
Age (y)
≥7032218.3
<70144181.7
Gender
Male100757.1
Female75642.9
Pack year of Smoking
≥2050728.8
<20125671.2
BMI (kg/m2)
>281297.3
18-28158790.0
<18472.7
Location of tumor
Left Upper Lobe42724.2
Left Lower Lobe30617.4
Right Upper Lobe52029.5
Right Middle Lobe1548.7
Right Lower Lobe35620.2
Comorbidities
Yes39322.3
No137077.7
FEV1%
≥50171697.3
<50472.7
TNM staging
IA61134.7
IB75242.7
IIA1186.7
IIB281.6
IIIA25414.4
Tumor size (cm)
≥3106260.2
<370139.8
N status
N0139579.1
N11347.6
N223413.3
Histology
Adenocarcinoma85748.6
Squamous carcinoma1709.6
Others42023.8
Type of VATS
Complete171097.0
Hybrid533.0
Number of ports
3142380.7
434019.3
Operative time (min)
≥24018910.7
<240157489.3
Blood loss (ml)
≥60022512.8
<600153887.2

Complications and Risk Factors

A total of 451 complications occurred in 316 patients (17.9%). Major and mortality accounted for 34.6% of all complications. Grade II complications made up the majority of complications with a proportion of 61.2%. The most common complications included prolonged air leak, arrhythmia, pulmonary atelectasis, and pleural effusion. Pulmonary complications accounted for 59.6% of all complications, 43.4% of minor, 90.7% of major and 80% of mortality respectively. Minor-only complications occurred in 182 patients (10.3%) and major complications occurred in 129 patients (7.3%). No intraoperative deaths occurred. There were 5 postoperative deaths (0.3%). Details of the complications are shown in table 3.
Table 3

Complications of Patients after VATS Lobectomy

Complication GradeN%
Grade I194.2
Pulmonary81.8
Pneumothorax (cured without intervention)81.8
Other112.4
Urine tract infection (only need to remove urine tube)81.8
Delirium30.7
Grade II27661.2
Pulmonary12026.6
Prolonged air leak6815.1
Pneumonia224.9
Atelectasis143.1
Chylothorax (≤200ml/24h, need fat free diet)81.8
Subcutaneous emphysema (modification of chest tube position)81.8
Other15634.6
Arrhythmia (AF, PVC etc.)8518.8
Hypertension (need intravenously drip antihypertensive drugs)276.0
Anemia (need transfusion)235.1
Coagulation disorders71.6
Peptic ulcer51.1
Urine tract infection40.9
Abdominal pain30.7
Delirium (need sedative)20.4
Grade IIIa9922.0
Pulmonary9320.6
Atelectasis (need sputum suction)429.3
Pleural effusion (need thoracentesis)439.5
Subcutaneous emphysema (need chest tube reinsertion)40.9
Chylothorax (need fasting and TPN)40.9
Other61.3
Heart failure61.3
Grade IIIb132.9
Pulmonary132.9
Pleural bleeding40.9
Lung torsion20.4
Bronchopleural fistula51.1
Chylothorax (need operation)20.4
Other00.0
Grade IVa378.2
Pulmonary296.4
ARDS122.7
Severe pneumonia71.6
Pulmonary embolism102.2
Other81.8
Cerebrovascular events30.7
Heart failure (need ICU management)51.1
Grade IVb20.4
Pulmonary20.4
ARDS combined with heart failure20.4
Other00.0
Grade V 51.1
Pulmonary40.9
Pulmonary embolism20.4
Severe pneumonia combined with ARDS20.4
Other10.2
Sepsis, septic shock, multiple organ failure10.2
Total complications451100
Total patients with complications31617.9

AF = atrial fibrillation, PVC = premature ventricular contraction, TPN = Total Parenteral Nutrition, ARDS = Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome, ICU = intensive care unit.

Variables with a P value <0.1 in univariate analysis were selected for multivariate logistic regression, in terms of age, gender, pack year of smoking, comorbidities, FEV1%, TNM stage, tumor size, operative time, blood loss, histology and types of VATS. Multivariate logistic regression analysis showed that comorbidities (OR=1.764, 95%Cl: 1.164-2.673, P=0.007), elder age ≥70y (OR=2.919, 95%CI: 1.932-4.409 P<0.001), and long operative time ≥240min (OR=2.440, 95%CI: 1.467-4.057, P=0.001) and hybrid VATS (OR=2.868, 95%CI: 1.278-6.437, P=0.011) were independent risk factors for major adverse events. The results are summarized in table 4.
Table 4

Predictors for Major Adverse Events after VATS lobectomy

UnivariateMultivariate
VariableNP ValueOR (95%CI)P Value
Age, y<0.0012.919 (1.932-4.409)<0.001
≥7048
<7086
Gender0.0141.183 (0.741-1.888)0.482
Male90
Female44
Pack year of Smoking0.0021.399 (0.900-2.713)0.136
≥2054
<2080
BMI (kg/m2)0.0621.408 (0.822-2.413)0.213
>2818
18-28105
<1811
Location of Tumor0.326
Left Upper Lobe25
Left Lower Lobe26
Right Upper Lobe42
Right Middle Lobe14
Right Lower Lobe27
Comorbidities<0.0011.764 (1.164-2.673)0.007
Yes49
No85
FEV1%0.0011.899 (0.841-4.290)0.123
≥50124
<5010
TNM stage0.0061.085 (0.934-1.262)0.286
IA32
IB65
IIA7
IIB2
IIIA28
Tumor size (cm)0.0381.395 (0.890-2.186)0.147
≥392
<342
Nodal status0.252
N0101
N19
N224
Histology0.0890.952(0.739-1.227)0.705
Adenocarcinoma84
Squamous carcinoma31
Others19
Type of VATS0.0232.868 (1.278-6.437)0.011
Complete126
Hybrid8
Number of ports0.209
3
4
Operative time (min)<0.0012.440 (1.467-4.057)0.001
≥24027
<240107
Blood loss (ml)0.0720.987 (0.588-1.654)0.959
≥60025
<600109

Conversion Patients

43(2.4%) cases were converted to thoracotomy for the following reasons: uncontrolled bleeding in 7, severe adhesions in 24, sleeve resection in 5, chest wall invasion in 3, vascular invasion in 4 cases. Severe adhesion was the main cause of conversion. The overall postoperative complication rate was 39.5%, and major adverse events occurred in 16.3% in conversion patients. Comparison of complete, hybrid VATS and converted lobectomy groups showed that elder age ≥70y and comorbidities were similar, but the operative time of 240min and major adverse events were significantly higher in hybrid and converted group (P<0.001 and P=0.013 respectively). (Table 5)
Table 5

Compare of Hybrid, Complete VATS and Conversion Lobectomy

Hybrid ConversionComplete
Variable(N=53)(N=43)(N=1710)P value
Age y≥7011(20.8%)8(18.6%)311(18.2%)0.893
Comorbidities14(26.4%)11(25.6%)379(22.2%)0.739
Operative time ≥240min8(15.1%)14(35.0%)181(10.6)<0.001
Complications20(37.7%)19(44.2%)297(17.4)<0.001
Major adverse events8(15.1%)9(20.9%)126(7.4%)0.013

Discussion

Since first described in 1990s, VATS lobectomy has been gradually adopted in general thoracic surgery. The Society of Thoracic Surgeons database demonstrates 44.7% of pulmonary resections were performed by VATS in 2010 9. In the latest 2013 guidelines of the NCCN, VATS lobectomy has been considered as a reasonable and acceptable approach for NSCLC, with no compromise of standard oncologic or dissection principles of thoracic surgery10. Many studies have suggested that VATS lobectomy is superior to thoracotomy with less intraoperative blood loss, reduced hospital length of stay, decreased postoperative pain, better treatment compliance, low postoperative complications, better postoperative pulmonary function, similar operative time, and equal long-term outcomes, and VATS lobectomy had a complication rate of 6-34.2% and mortality of 0.6-1.3% 1-5,11-15. But grading of complications was not mentioned in most studies. Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) was used in some studies, but it was not specific for thoracic surgery. In our study, according to the TM&M system, major adverse events were in acceptable level and the majority of them were pulmonary complications. There were 5(0.3%) operative mortalities in our series, and complications of any kind occurred in 17.9% of patients in this study, which is much lower than the 32% complication rate (2.5% mortality) among 9033 pulmonary resections for primary lung cancer reported in a STS database study16. The favorable results in this group may be related to high selection of patients and rich experience of postoperative care. On the other hand, the major complication rate was 7.6% compared with a Composite major morbidity rate of 7.9% among 18,800 lung cancer resections(65.5% lobectomy) performed at 111 participating centers17. These results indicate that minimally invasive approaches reduce overall perioperative complications, but have less effect on major complication. A reasonable explanation is that extent of resection is the most important determinant of major complication. Operative time is a very important element impacting complications. Haraguchi used receiver-operator characteristics curves to analyze the risk factors of VATS. Results showed that surgery lasting more than 297 min offset the advantages of VATS and if the duration of surgery would be more than five hours for any reason, conversion to limited thoracotomy or muscle-sparing methods was recommended18. Our study showed most VATS lobectomy could be finished in 240 min, and long operative time ≥240min was independent risk factor for major adverse events. The result suggested that duration of operation has a significant influence on postoperative complications. 240 min could be a potential reference for the time to convert. Surgeons could estimate the time needed to complete the operation according to their experience. If the estimated time exceeds 240 min, the surgeon should consider conversion earlier. Meanwhile, we found the same result (i.e., the incidence of major complications in patients with duration of operation over 240 min is significantly higher than that of those with duration of operation under 240 min) in patients who have higher operation difficulty and need to convert to Hybrid VATS. The result suggested that it is beneficial for the patients to convert to Hybrid VATS earlier if the operation can hard to complete VATS. Additionally, duration of operation over 240 min could be served as a predictive factor for postoperative major complications. Such Patients may need more intensive care and early intervention. So surgeons should be more careful when selecting patients for the procedure, especially during learning curve. Conversion should be considered if operative time is too long. It is reported that VATS lobectomy for clinical stage I non-small cell lung cancer in the elderly (age ≥70y) was associated with fewer (28% vs. 45%; P < 0.05) and overall reduced severity of complications compared with thoracotomy 19. In another study, octogenarians undergoing video assisted major pulmonary resection had a higher incidence of atrial fibrillation and admission to the intensive care unit for cardiopulmonary support but otherwise were not different from younger age groups in the conversion rate, morbidity or mortality 20. This might be associated with the fact that the institute was at the beginning of VATS program and the complications of both groups were at high levels. Our study showed that elder age was independent risk factors for major complications. VATS lobectomy was considered to be a feasible and safe procedure for selected patients even with comorbidities 21,22. But our study showed that comorbidities were also independent risk factor for major adverse events. So we should always be aware of patients with comorbidities and a prolonged postoperative care is recommended. Poor preoperative pulmonary function has been a well-recognized predictor for morbidity and mortality after lung cancer surgery, and a preoperative FEV1% of greater than 50% has been recommended for patients receiving lung resection23. Video-assisted thoracic surgery pulmonary resection for cancer in patients with poor lung function could achieve acceptable functional and oncologic outcome24. A STS database analysis concluded that poor pulmonary function predicted respiratory complications regardless of approach and respiratory complications increased at a significantly greater rate in patients with poor pulmonary function after thoracotomy lobectomy compared with VATS9. In our study, poor preoperative pulmonary function was not the predictor for major adverse events. It might result from our high selection of patients. Complete VATS were feasible in most patients. According to our results, hybrid VATS was an independent risk factor for major adverse events. It might be due to the fact that hybrid VATS was performed during the procedure that the surgery would be too difficult without such extension, which resulted in increasing operative time and major adverse events. Conversion to thoracotomy was applied in even more difficult cases. Conversion was reported to occur in 1.6-23% of patients 4,25-28. Converted VATS caused increased length of surgery, chest tube duration and estimated blood loss when compared with planned thoracotomy 29. Tumor and pleural conditions are main cause for conversion. Preoperative thorough evaluation to choose the proper approach and conversion to thoracotomy immediately when necessary are recommended. Severe intraoperative complications are other reasons for conversion. Liang et al reported that severe intraoperative complications during VATS lobectomy were manageable, and at a low incidence similar to open lobectomy 30. Surgeons need to take proper caution in performing VATS lobectomy. In conclusion, we find that the overall complication rate and mortality of VATS lobectomy are low, while there is still significant incidence of major complications. Pulmonary complications are most common major complications and main cause of mortality. Elder age ≥70y, comorbidities, operative time ≥240min and hybrid VATS are predictors for major adverse events. Hybrid VATS and converted lobectomy result in significant higher major adverse events, so we need to be more careful when selecting patients. If inevitable, an early conversion to Hybrid VATS or thoracotomy is recommended. The main limitations of this study are the retrospective nature of the study and lack of randomization. There is certainly a degree of bias in patient selection and surgeon experience. The lack of patients in subgroup may cause the failure of finding of effect of pulmonary function on major complications. How some variables such as severity of comorbidities affect complication rate was not discussed because of lack of data. Further prospective randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm these findings.
  28 in total

1.  Postoperative respiratory complications of video-assisted thoracic surgery for lung cancer.

Authors:  Shuji Haraguchi; Kiyoshi Koizumi; Nobuo Hatori; Masafumi Hioki; Koji Yamashita; Hirohiko Akiyama; Tomomi Hirata; Kyoji Hirai; Iwao Mikami; Hirotoshi Kubokura; Shigeo Tanaka
Journal:  J Nippon Med Sch       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 0.920

2.  Evaluating the reliability and reproducibility of the Ottawa Thoracic Morbidity and Mortality classification system.

Authors:  Jelena Ivanovic; Ahmed Al-Hussaini; Derar Al-Shehab; Jennifer Threader; Patrick James Villeneuve; Tim Ramsay; Donna E Maziak; Sebastian Gilbert; Farid M Shamji; R Sudhir Sundaresan; Andrew J E Seely
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2011-02       Impact factor: 4.330

3.  Video-assisted thoracic surgery pulmonary resection for lung cancer in patients with poor lung function.

Authors:  Juan C Garzon; Calvin S H Ng; Alan D L Sihoe; Anthony V Manlulu; Randolph H L Wong; Tak Wai Lee; Anthony P C Yim
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2006-06       Impact factor: 4.330

4.  Video-assisted thoracoscopic lobectomy for clinical stage I non-small cell lung cancer: experience with 111 consecutive patients demonstrating comorbidity.

Authors:  R Nakanishi; M Nakagawa; H Tokufuchi; T Okumura; M Maeda; S Kuboi; M Kido
Journal:  Minerva Chir       Date:  2012-02       Impact factor: 1.000

5.  Systematic classification of morbidity and mortality after thoracic surgery.

Authors:  Andrew J E Seely; Jelena Ivanovic; Jennifer Threader; Ahmed Al-Hussaini; Derar Al-Shehab; Tim Ramsay; Sebastian Gilbert; Donna E Maziak; Farid M Shamji; R Sudhir Sundaresan
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 4.330

6.  Video-assisted thoracic surgery lobectomy: experience with 1,100 cases.

Authors:  Robert J McKenna; Ward Houck; Clark Beeman Fuller
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2006-02       Impact factor: 4.330

7.  Video-assisted thoracic surgery lobectomy reduces the morbidity after surgery for stage I non-small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Masashi Muraoka; Tadayuki Oka; Shinji Akamine; Tsutomu Tagawa; Akihiro Nakamura; Satoshi Hashizume; Keitaro Matsumoto; Masato Araki; Yutaka Tagawa; Takeshi Nagayasu
Journal:  Jpn J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2006-02

8.  Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery is more favorable than thoracotomy for resection of clinical stage I non-small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Bryan A Whitson; Rafael S Andrade; Adam Boettcher; Ricardo Bardales; Robert A Kratzke; Peter S Dahlberg; Michael A Maddaus
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 4.330

Review 9.  Video-assisted thoracic surgery lobectomy (VATS), open thoracotomy, and the robot for lung cancer.

Authors:  Raja M Flores; Naveed Alam
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 4.330

10.  Data from The Society of Thoracic Surgeons General Thoracic Surgery database: the surgical management of primary lung tumors.

Authors:  Daniel J Boffa; Mark S Allen; Joshua D Grab; Henning A Gaissert; David H Harpole; Cameron D Wright
Journal:  J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2007-12-21       Impact factor: 5.209

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2.  "Old people suffer the ravages of the years": changes of treatments in elderly patients with early stage non-small cell lung cancer.

Authors:  Luca Bertolaccini; Andrea Viti; Alberto Terzi
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2015-06

3.  Clinical outcomes following an initial experience with a novel powered vascular stapler in video-assisted thoracoscopic lobectomies: results of a Chinese multi-center study.

Authors:  Bin Qiu; Xiaozheng Kang; Ke-Neng Chen; Jian Hu; Jian Li; Liping Zeng; Elliott J Fegelman; Michael L Schwiers; Erin E Creedon; Jason R Waggoner; Ding Ding; Tengfei Yang; Shugeng Gao
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4.  Impact of paravertebral blockade use in geriatric patients undergoing thoracic surgery on postoperative adverse outcomes.

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Journal:  J Thorac Dis       Date:  2019-12       Impact factor: 2.895

5.  Risk factors and short-term outcomes of postoperative pulmonary complications after VATS lobectomy.

Authors:  Paula J Agostini; Sebastian T Lugg; Kerry Adams; Tom Smith; Maninder S Kalkat; Pala B Rajesh; Richard S Steyn; Babu Naidu; Alison Rushton; Ehab Bishay
Journal:  J Cardiothorac Surg       Date:  2018-04-12       Impact factor: 1.637

6.  Video-assisted thoracic surgery is an optimal alternative to conventional thoracotomy for reoperations for ipsilateral pulmonary lesions.

Authors:  Donglai Chen; Rui Mao; Xiermaimaiti Kadeer; Weiyan Sun; Erjia Zhu; Qiao Peng; Chang Chen
Journal:  Thorac Cancer       Date:  2018-08-28       Impact factor: 3.500

7.  PEEP guided by electrical impedance tomography during one-lung ventilation in elderly patients undergoing thoracoscopic surgery.

Authors:  Kun Liu; Chengya Huang; Meiying Xu; Jingxiang Wu; Inez Frerichs; Knut Moeller; Zhanqi Zhao
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2019-12

8.  Video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery for primary lung cancer resections in patients with moderate to severe chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases.

Authors:  Ke Xu; Weipeng Cai; Yuan Zeng; Jingpei Li; Jianxing He; Fei Cui; Jun Liu
Journal:  Transl Lung Cancer Res       Date:  2021-06

9.  Propensity-matched Analysis Demonstrates Long-term Risk of Respiratory and Cardiac Mortality After Pneumonectomy Compared With Lobectomy for Lung Cancer.

Authors:  Gregory D Jones; Raul Caso; Kay See Tan; Joseph Dycoco; Prasad S Adusumilli; Manjit S Bains; Robert J Downey; James Huang; James M Isbell; Daniela Molena; Bernard J Park; Gaetano Rocco; Valerie W Rusch; Smita Sihag; David R Jones; Matthew J Bott
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2022-04-01       Impact factor: 13.787

10.  Clinical study on VATS combined mechanical ventilation treatment of ARDS secondary to severe chest trauma.

Authors:  Yongjun Qi
Journal:  Exp Ther Med       Date:  2016-05-18       Impact factor: 2.447

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