| Literature DB >> 25992236 |
Konstantinos Reveliotis1, George Kalavrouziotis2, Konstantinos Skevis1, Andriani Charpidou3, Rodoula Trigidou3, Kostas Syrigos3.
Abstract
The use of sublobar resections as definitive management in stage I non-small cell lung carcinoma is a controversial topic in the medical community. We intend to report the latest developments and trends in relative indications for each of the above-mentioned surgical approaches for the treatment of stage I non-small cell lung carcinoma as well as the results of studies regarding local recurrence, disease-free survival and five-year survival rates. We reviewed 45 prospective and retrospective studies conducted over the last 25 years listed in the Pubmed and Scopus electronic databases. Trials were identified through bibliographies and a manual search in journals. Authors, citations, objectives and results were extracted. No meta-analysis was performed. Validation of results was discussed. Segmentectomies are superior to wedge resections in terms of local recurrences and cancer-related mortality rates. Sublobar resections are superior to lobectomy in preserving the pulmonary parenchyma. High-risk patients should undergo segmentectomy, whereas lobectomies are superior to segmentectomies only for tumors >2 cm (T2bN0M0) in terms of disease-free and overall 5-year survival. In most studies no significant differences were found in tumors <2 cm. Disease-free surgical margins are crucial to prevent local recurrences. Systematic lymphadenectomy is mandatory regardless of the type of resection used. In sublobar resections with less thorough nodal dissections, adjuvant radiotherapy can be used. This approach is preferable in case of prior resection. In pure bronchoalveolar carcinoma, segmentectomy is recommended. Sublobar resections are associated with a shorter hospital stay. The selection of the type of resection in T1aN0M0 tumors should depend on characteristic of the patient and the tumor. Patient age, cardiopulmonary reserve and tumor size are the most important factors to be considered. However further prospective randomized trials are needed to investigate the efficacy of minimal resections in early lung cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: non-small-cell lung carcinoma; thoracic surgery
Year: 2014 PMID: 25992236 PMCID: PMC4419646 DOI: 10.4081/oncol.2014.234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Rev ISSN: 1970-5557
Studies comparing lobectomy with segmentectomy and/or wedge resection in terms of survival and recurrence rates.
| Author/type of study | Patients groups | Tumor size | Age (years)/general condition | Five-year survival rate (or Other) | Recurrence rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Errett (1985)[ | WR: 100 | NA | WR: 70.3±0.5 | 6-year survival rate: | NA |
| Pastorino (1991)[ | Sublobar resection: 61 | NA | NA | 5-year survival: | Sublobar resection: 36% |
| Warren and Faber (1994)[ | WR:68 | NA | NA | Although no survival advantage of lobectomy over segmental resection was noted for patients with tumors 3.0 cm or smaller, a survival advantage was apparent or patients undergoing lobectomy for tumors arger than 3.0 cm | Locoregional recurrence: |
| Ginsberg (1995)[ | Limited resection: 122 | NA | Limited resection: | Death (from cancer) | Recurrence (per person/ year): |
| Kodama(1997)[ | Intentional segmentectomy: 46 | Size ≤3 cm | NA | 5-year survival: | NA |
| Landreneau (1997)[ | Open WR: 42 | Mean diameter: | Open WR: 68 | Open WR: 58% | Local recurrence: |
| Okada (2001)[ | Lobectomy: 139 | Size ≤2 cm | 62.5±9.2 | Lobectomy: 77.7% | NA |
| Miller (2002)[ | Lobectomy: 71 | Size ≤1 cm | NA | Survival favored lobectomy | Lobectomy favored recurrences (P=0.04) |
| Koike (2003)[ | Segmentectomy: 60 | Limited resection: 1.5 cm±0.4 cm | Limited resection: 64.2±7.2 | Limited resection group: 89.1% | Local recurrence: |
| Alfara (2003)[ | Lobectomy: 50 | NA | NA | Accumulative survival fin months”): | Locoregional recurrence: |
| Keenan (2004)[ | Segmentectomy: 54 | NA | Lobectomy: 65.7±9.7 | 1-year survival: | Local recurrence: |
| Martin-Ucar (2005)[ | Segmentectomy: 17 | Segmentectomy: 3.2 (1.4-4.1) cm | Segmentectomy: 70 (55-83) | 5-year survival: | Loco-regional recurrence: |
| Okada (2005)[ | Segmentectomy: 258 | ≤10mm: | ≤10 mm:62 | ≤20 mm: | NA |
| Okumura (2007)[ | Segmentectomy: 144 | ≤10 mm: | Segmentectomy: 66.9 | Tumor size <2 cm: | NA |
| Okada (2006)[ | Segmentectomy: 230 | Sublobar resection: | Mean age: | 5-year survival: | Sublobar resection: 43(14.1%) |
| Griffin (2006)[ | Lobectomy: 81 | Patients in the lobectomy group had larger extent of disease | Patients in the wedge resection group had compromised pulmonary reserve | 5-year survival rate: | Patients in the wedge resection group had compromised pulmonary reserve |
| Kilic (2009)[ | Segmentectomy: 78 | Mean size: | >75 | 5-year survival: | NA |
| Kates (2011)[ | Limited resection: 688 | ≤1 cm | Age ≤60: | Overall survival for lobectomy | NA |
| Yamashita (2011)[ | VATS segmentectomy: 38 | NA | NA | No difference in overall survival | VATS segmentectomy: |
| Nakamura (2011)[ | Lobectomy: 289 | NA | Older in the WR group | 5-year survival: | NA |
| Wolf (2011)[ | Lobectomy: 84 | ≤2 cm | Patients undergoing sublobar resection were older (P<0.0001) and had worse pulmonary function (P<0.0014) | Lobectomy was associated with longer overall (P=0.0027) survival; when lymph nodes were sampled with sublobar resection, local recurrence rate and overall and recurrence-free survival distributions were similar to those for lobectomy | Lobectomy was associated with longer recurrence-free survival (P=0.0496) |
| Whitson (2011)[ | Lobectomy: 13,892 | Lobectomy: | Lobectomy: | 5-year survival rate: | NA |
| Zhong (2012)[ | Lobectomy: 81 | ≤2 cm | NA | No significant difference in overall survival | Local recurrence: |
| Stefani (2012)[ | Lobectomy: 124 | Tumor size ≤2 cm | NA | 5-year survival: | Locoregional recurrence: |
WR, wedge resection; NA, not available; VATS, video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery; HR, hazard ratio; CI, confidence interval.