Literature DB >> 8775608

Survival following resection for lung cancer as a second primary cancer.

T Ishida1, G Saitoh, R Maruyama, Y Fukuyama, M Hamatake, T Inoue, T Mitsudomi, K Sugimachi.   

Abstract

A second operation was done on 59 patients with lung cancer (7.4% of all those with lung cancer) as a second primary (double primary), during 1974-1991. There were 16 synchronous tumors (interval less than one year) and 43 metachronous tumors (interval over one year). The criteria for diagnosing lung cancer as a second primary from intrapulmonary metastases were any of the following: 1) different histologic type; 2) origin from carcinoma in situ; 3) gross appearance suggestive of primary lung cancer. The initial operation was in the stomach in 14 patients and in the lung in 10. The overall 5-year survival rate in the double primaries was 57.8%, and the prognosis was similar to those in the single primaries of the lung. Nineteen patients died from the second tumor following the second operation, compared with 5 from the initial tumor. The incidence of primary lung cancer increases, and close follow-up after resection for malignant neoplasms detects a new shadow in the chest roentgenogram. It offers a chance of early detection of primary lung cancer and subsequent resection with acceptable results.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8775608

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int Surg        ISSN: 0020-8868


  2 in total

1.  Concurrent Tumors Revealed by an Autopsy-A Case Report and Literature Review.

Authors:  Miruna Cristian; Mădălina Boșoteanu; Mariana Așchie; Angelica Potamian; Cătălin Adrian Boșoteanu; Gabriela Izabela Bălțătescu
Journal:  Case Rep Gastrointest Med       Date:  2022-06-01

2.  Hereditary factors in multiple primary malignancies associated with lung cancer.

Authors:  Shuji Haraguchi; Kiyoshi Koizumi; Masafumi Hioki; Takao Hisayoshi; Tomomi Hirata; Kazuo Shimizu
Journal:  Surg Today       Date:  2007-04-30       Impact factor: 2.549

  2 in total

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