| Literature DB >> 29177507 |
Tomoyuki Hishida1, Hisashi Saji2, Shun-Ichi Watanabe3, Hisao Asamura1, Keiju Aokage4, Tomonori Mizutani5, Masashi Wakabayashi5, Taro Shibata5, Morihito Okada6.
Abstract
In January 2017, the Lung Cancer Surgical Study Group of the Japan Clinical Oncology Group commenced a randomized Phase III trial to confirm the clinical benefit of lobe-specific nodal dissection for clinical Stage I-II non-small cell lung cancer. The primary endpoint is overall survival, and the main objective is to confirm the non-inferiority of lobe-specific in comparison to systematic nodal dissection with regard to lobectomy. The secondary endpoints are relapse-free survival, %local recurrence, %regional lymph node recurrence, operation time, blood loss, length of hospitalization, duration of chest tube placement and adverse events. A total of 1700 patients will be accrued from 44 Japanese institutions within 5 years. This study is the first and large prospective trial to evaluate whether the difference in the area of nodal dissection affects the overall survival of patients with relatively early-stage non-small cell lung cancer. This trial has been registered in the UMIN Clinical Trials Registry as UMIN000025530.Entities:
Keywords: lobe-specific; lymph node dissection; non-small-cell lung cancer; randomized Phase III study; systematic
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29177507 DOI: 10.1093/jjco/hyx170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Jpn J Clin Oncol ISSN: 0368-2811 Impact factor: 3.019