| Literature DB >> 35118286 |
Abstract
Lung cancer is the first cause of cancer-related mortality. Mediastinal staging has a main role in the definition of the therapeutic strategy in early-stage and locally-advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Non-invasive mediastinal staging with CT or PET imaging has relatively limited accuracy, and nodal biopsy may be required to reach adequate staging results. In the last two decades endoscopic techniques have been increasingly used in the field of mediastinal staging thanks to a reduced invasiveness and to the possibility of obtaining a more thorough assessment in comparison with surgical techniques. However, the ideal staging strategy is still a matter for debate, particularly considering the cost-effectiveness of the different approaches. Complication-rate, costs, impact on quality of life, time delay to treatment and survival of the different staging techniques still have to be analyzed in detail. Other issues to be discussed are the optimal combination of staging approaches and the influence of factors as the prevalence of nodal disease on the cost-effectiveness of the different methods. Future issues of invasive staging concern the possibility of extending the definition of nodal status to N1 intrapulmonary nodes, in the light of the development of new oncological and surgical therapeutic approaches. 2020 Mediastinum. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Lung cancer; cost-effectiveness; endoscopy; staging
Year: 2020 PMID: 35118286 PMCID: PMC8794317 DOI: 10.21037/med-20-27
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediastinum ISSN: 2522-6711
Mediastinal staging cost-effectiveness assessment with decision tree analysis
| Authors | Model population | Staging techniques compared | Outcome measures | Best approach at base-case analysis | Best approach at one-way sensitivity analysis | Best approach at two-way sensitivity analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harewood | Diagnosed or suspected lung cancer | MED, TBNA, EUS-FNA, EBUS-TBNA, EBUS and TBNA, EUS and TBNA | Costs | Initial EUS-FNA | EUS-FNA if MLNM <32.9%; EUS-FNA/ EBUS-TBNA if MLNM >32.9% | EUS-FNA if MLNM <32%; EUS-FNA/EBUS-TBNA if MLNM >32% |
| Steinfort | Lung cancer with CT/PET positive nodes | TBNA, EBUS-TBNA, EBUS-TBNA and confirmatory MED | Costs | EBUS-TBNA/MED | Initial EBUS-TBNA if MLNM >30%; Confirmatory MED if MLNM >79% | EBUS-TBNA if sensitivity >20% |
| Czarnecka-Kujawa | Lung cancer with clinical N0 disease | Non-invasive staging, EBUS-TBNA, MED, EBUS-TBNA and confirmatory MED | Costs, QALY, ICER | EBUS-TBNA/MED | Non-invasive staging if MLNM <2.5%; EBUS-TBNA if MLNM <57% >2.5%; EBUS-TBNA/MED if MLNM >57% | EBUS-TBNA/MED if MLNM >25% and EBUS-TBNA sensitivity ≤60% |
MED, mediastinoscopy; QUALY, quality-adjusted life years; ICER, incremental cost effectiveness ratios; MLNM, mediastinal lymph node metastases prevalence; EBUS-TBNA/MED, EBUS-TBNA and confirmatory mediastinoscopy after negative endoscopy.
Number of unnecessary thoracotomies according to staging approach in randomized controlled trials
| Authors | No. pts. | Study design | Unnecessary thoracotomies | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Navani | 133 (66/67) | Conventional staging | 13 | 0.035 |
| Annema | 241 (118/123) | Mediastinoscopy | 21 | 0.02 |