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The initial results of a phase III randomized trial comparing lobectomy to segmentectomy for small, peripheral non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were presented by Kenji Suzuki, MD, of the Juntendo University Hospital, Japan.
Segmentectomy and lobectomy both proved feasible techniques for early-stage NSCLC. However, segmentectomy did not appear to be less invasive than lobectomy with regard to blood loss or the frequency of air leak, according to Dr. Suzuki.
A total of 1,106 patients (554 in lobectomy arm; 552 in segmentectomy arm) were enrolled between August 2009 and October 2014. There were 22 patients whose mode of surgery was converted from segmentectomy to lobectomy in the segmentectomy arm, resulting in 576 lobectomies and 530 segmentectomies.
“The aim of the trial is to confirm the non-inferiority in overall survival (OS) of segmentectomy, compared with lobectomy,” said Dr. Suzuki.
Surgical complications were evaluated by the mode of surgery with an intention-to-treat analysis. As to a mode of surgery, segmentectomy was categorized into simple and complex in terms of technical difficulty; resection of the right or left S6, the left superior, and the lingular segment were defined as simple, because these procedures are easy and common.
Operative mortality was 0% in both groups. Postoperative complications, including pneumonia were not significantly different between the two groups. However, there was a significant difference in the rate of air leak detected: 3.8% in Group A and 6.5% in Group B (with no broncho-pleural fistulas being found).
Multivariate analysis showed that pack-year (PY) smoking greater than 20 vs. none was a significant predictor of postoperative complications. Significant predictors of pulmonary complications, including alveolar fistula and empyema, were typical segmentectomy (vs. lobectomy); and PY greater than 20 vs. none.
“The primary analysis of this study is planned for 2020,” said Dr. Suzuki. Those results should help to determine whether segmentectomy should be considered the standard of treatment, compared to lobectomy.
Previous research has shown that a wedge resection (WR) may be superior to stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for patients with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the role that the quality of the WR plays in improved outcomes is unknown, according to Seth Krantz, MD, of the NorthShore University Health System who presented the results of a database analysis of patients within the National Cancer Database (NCDB) with clinical T1-T2, N0, M0 NSCLC patients who were treated with either WR or SBRT from 2005-2012. These patients were analyzed for surgical quality markers, predictors of lymph node assessment and pathologic upstaging, and overall survival. Quality markers included the number of nodes examined and margins status.
Of more than 7,000 WR patients included (44%) had 0 LNs examined; 37% had 1-5 examined, and nearly 17% had more than 5 nodes examined. Significant predictors of having at least 5 nodes examined included younger age, fewer comorbidities, T2 tumors, and obtaining negative margins. Negative margins were obtained in the vast majority of WR patients.
“Our study confirms that nationwide, while most patients undergoing wedge resection for early stage disease receive a margin negative resection, fewer than 20% of patients had more than five lymph nodes assessed, and nearly half had no lymph nodes assessed. Pathologic assessment of lymph nodes was associated with improved long-term survival and greater utilization of adjuvant chemotherapy. Furthermore, the benefit of a wedge resection compared to SBRT, was significantly affected by the extent of lymph node assessment.
If patients are going to be offered a wedge resection for early stage non-small cell lung cancer, every effort should be made to perform a pathologic assessment of regional lymph nodes,” Dr. Krantz concluded.
Patients at high risk for non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) metastases were found to have a significant rate of unsuspected lymph node metastases upon endosonographic assessment, even in the presence of radiologically normal mediastinal lymph nodes, according to a study reported by Pravachan Hegde, MD, of the University of Montreal.
A total of 22 out of 161 patients with radiologically normal mediastinum were found to be positive on combined EBUS/EUS staging. “Given the significant rate of unsuspected lymph node metastases, combined endosonographic lymph node staging should be routinely performed in staging of NSCLC in high risk patients even in the presence of radiologically normal mediastinal lymph nodes,” Dr. Hedge concluded.
The initial results of a phase III randomized trial comparing lobectomy to segmentectomy for small, peripheral non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were presented by Kenji Suzuki, MD, of the Juntendo University Hospital, Japan.
Segmentectomy and lobectomy both proved feasible techniques for early-stage NSCLC. However, segmentectomy did not appear to be less invasive than lobectomy with regard to blood loss or the frequency of air leak, according to Dr. Suzuki.
A total of 1,106 patients (554 in lobectomy arm; 552 in segmentectomy arm) were enrolled between August 2009 and October 2014. There were 22 patients whose mode of surgery was converted from segmentectomy to lobectomy in the segmentectomy arm, resulting in 576 lobectomies and 530 segmentectomies.
“The aim of the trial is to confirm the non-inferiority in overall survival (OS) of segmentectomy, compared with lobectomy,” said Dr. Suzuki.
Surgical complications were evaluated by the mode of surgery with an intention-to-treat analysis. As to a mode of surgery, segmentectomy was categorized into simple and complex in terms of technical difficulty; resection of the right or left S6, the left superior, and the lingular segment were defined as simple, because these procedures are easy and common.
Operative mortality was 0% in both groups. Postoperative complications, including pneumonia were not significantly different between the two groups. However, there was a significant difference in the rate of air leak detected: 3.8% in Group A and 6.5% in Group B (with no broncho-pleural fistulas being found).
Multivariate analysis showed that pack-year (PY) smoking greater than 20 vs. none was a significant predictor of postoperative complications. Significant predictors of pulmonary complications, including alveolar fistula and empyema, were typical segmentectomy (vs. lobectomy); and PY greater than 20 vs. none.
“The primary analysis of this study is planned for 2020,” said Dr. Suzuki. Those results should help to determine whether segmentectomy should be considered the standard of treatment, compared to lobectomy.
Previous research has shown that a wedge resection (WR) may be superior to stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for patients with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the role that the quality of the WR plays in improved outcomes is unknown, according to Seth Krantz, MD, of the NorthShore University Health System who presented the results of a database analysis of patients within the National Cancer Database (NCDB) with clinical T1-T2, N0, M0 NSCLC patients who were treated with either WR or SBRT from 2005-2012. These patients were analyzed for surgical quality markers, predictors of lymph node assessment and pathologic upstaging, and overall survival. Quality markers included the number of nodes examined and margins status.
Of more than 7,000 WR patients included (44%) had 0 LNs examined; 37% had 1-5 examined, and nearly 17% had more than 5 nodes examined. Significant predictors of having at least 5 nodes examined included younger age, fewer comorbidities, T2 tumors, and obtaining negative margins. Negative margins were obtained in the vast majority of WR patients.
“Our study confirms that nationwide, while most patients undergoing wedge resection for early stage disease receive a margin negative resection, fewer than 20% of patients had more than five lymph nodes assessed, and nearly half had no lymph nodes assessed. Pathologic assessment of lymph nodes was associated with improved long-term survival and greater utilization of adjuvant chemotherapy. Furthermore, the benefit of a wedge resection compared to SBRT, was significantly affected by the extent of lymph node assessment.
If patients are going to be offered a wedge resection for early stage non-small cell lung cancer, every effort should be made to perform a pathologic assessment of regional lymph nodes,” Dr. Krantz concluded.
Patients at high risk for non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) metastases were found to have a significant rate of unsuspected lymph node metastases upon endosonographic assessment, even in the presence of radiologically normal mediastinal lymph nodes, according to a study reported by Pravachan Hegde, MD, of the University of Montreal.
A total of 22 out of 161 patients with radiologically normal mediastinum were found to be positive on combined EBUS/EUS staging. “Given the significant rate of unsuspected lymph node metastases, combined endosonographic lymph node staging should be routinely performed in staging of NSCLC in high risk patients even in the presence of radiologically normal mediastinal lymph nodes,” Dr. Hedge concluded.
The initial results of a phase III randomized trial comparing lobectomy to segmentectomy for small, peripheral non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were presented by Kenji Suzuki, MD, of the Juntendo University Hospital, Japan.
Segmentectomy and lobectomy both proved feasible techniques for early-stage NSCLC. However, segmentectomy did not appear to be less invasive than lobectomy with regard to blood loss or the frequency of air leak, according to Dr. Suzuki.
A total of 1,106 patients (554 in lobectomy arm; 552 in segmentectomy arm) were enrolled between August 2009 and October 2014. There were 22 patients whose mode of surgery was converted from segmentectomy to lobectomy in the segmentectomy arm, resulting in 576 lobectomies and 530 segmentectomies.
“The aim of the trial is to confirm the non-inferiority in overall survival (OS) of segmentectomy, compared with lobectomy,” said Dr. Suzuki.
Surgical complications were evaluated by the mode of surgery with an intention-to-treat analysis. As to a mode of surgery, segmentectomy was categorized into simple and complex in terms of technical difficulty; resection of the right or left S6, the left superior, and the lingular segment were defined as simple, because these procedures are easy and common.
Operative mortality was 0% in both groups. Postoperative complications, including pneumonia were not significantly different between the two groups. However, there was a significant difference in the rate of air leak detected: 3.8% in Group A and 6.5% in Group B (with no broncho-pleural fistulas being found).
Multivariate analysis showed that pack-year (PY) smoking greater than 20 vs. none was a significant predictor of postoperative complications. Significant predictors of pulmonary complications, including alveolar fistula and empyema, were typical segmentectomy (vs. lobectomy); and PY greater than 20 vs. none.
“The primary analysis of this study is planned for 2020,” said Dr. Suzuki. Those results should help to determine whether segmentectomy should be considered the standard of treatment, compared to lobectomy.
Previous research has shown that a wedge resection (WR) may be superior to stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) for patients with early-stage non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). However, the role that the quality of the WR plays in improved outcomes is unknown, according to Seth Krantz, MD, of the NorthShore University Health System who presented the results of a database analysis of patients within the National Cancer Database (NCDB) with clinical T1-T2, N0, M0 NSCLC patients who were treated with either WR or SBRT from 2005-2012. These patients were analyzed for surgical quality markers, predictors of lymph node assessment and pathologic upstaging, and overall survival. Quality markers included the number of nodes examined and margins status.
Of more than 7,000 WR patients included (44%) had 0 LNs examined; 37% had 1-5 examined, and nearly 17% had more than 5 nodes examined. Significant predictors of having at least 5 nodes examined included younger age, fewer comorbidities, T2 tumors, and obtaining negative margins. Negative margins were obtained in the vast majority of WR patients.
“Our study confirms that nationwide, while most patients undergoing wedge resection for early stage disease receive a margin negative resection, fewer than 20% of patients had more than five lymph nodes assessed, and nearly half had no lymph nodes assessed. Pathologic assessment of lymph nodes was associated with improved long-term survival and greater utilization of adjuvant chemotherapy. Furthermore, the benefit of a wedge resection compared to SBRT, was significantly affected by the extent of lymph node assessment.
If patients are going to be offered a wedge resection for early stage non-small cell lung cancer, every effort should be made to perform a pathologic assessment of regional lymph nodes,” Dr. Krantz concluded.
Patients at high risk for non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) metastases were found to have a significant rate of unsuspected lymph node metastases upon endosonographic assessment, even in the presence of radiologically normal mediastinal lymph nodes, according to a study reported by Pravachan Hegde, MD, of the University of Montreal.
A total of 22 out of 161 patients with radiologically normal mediastinum were found to be positive on combined EBUS/EUS staging. “Given the significant rate of unsuspected lymph node metastases, combined endosonographic lymph node staging should be routinely performed in staging of NSCLC in high risk patients even in the presence of radiologically normal mediastinal lymph nodes,” Dr. Hedge concluded.