首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 359 毫秒
1.
Objective: Induction chemoradiotherapy followed by anatomical resection is a current therapeutic strategy for non-small-cell lung cancer with mediastinal node involvement. Dense peritracheal fibrosis and sclerosis after chemoradiotherapy cause difficult mediastinal node dissection. We evaluated a novel technique to make the mediastinal node dissection easier after induction therapy. Methods: At the end of mediastinoscopic node biopsy for staging of lung cancer, cotton-type collagen was inserted anterior and lateral to the trachea in patients with pathologically confirmed mediastinal node involve-ment (n=45). The induction therapy consisted of concurrent use of platinum-based chemotherapy and hyperfractionated radiotherapy. After the chemoradiotherapy all patients underwent a pulmonary resection with complete mediastinal node dissection 7–12 weeks after the collagen insertion. Surgical findings of the mediastinum and the time for node dissection were compared with those without collagen insertion at mediastinoscopy after chemoradiotherapy (n=5). Results: All five patients without collagen insertion showed sclerotic and fibrotic change of mediastinal nodes with severe adhesion to the trachea. In 42 of 45 patients with collagen insertion (93.3%) the collagen remained unabsorbed and separated the mediastinal nodes from the trachea. Mediastinal node dissection was easily accomplished by removing mediastinal tissues lateral and anterior to the collagen. The rate of mediastinal node separation was significantly higher with collagen insertion than without (p< 0.0001). The times for node dissection in patients with and without collagen insertion showed no significant difference. Conclusion: Cotton-type collagen insertion at staging mediastinoscopy for lung cancer separates the mediastinal nodes from the trachea and makes the node dissection easier after induction chemoradiotherapy.  相似文献   

2.
Objective: To evaluate the diagnostic yield, the learning curve and the safety of endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle biopsy (EBUS-TBNA) in mediastinal staging of patients with lung cancer. Methods: Mediastinal staging was performed with EBUS-TBNA according to the Danish national guidelines in patients fulfilling one or more of the following criteria: (1) central tumour; (2) enlarged (>10 mm) mediastinal lymph nodes on computed tomography; or (3) positron emission tomography (PET)-positive mediastinal lymph nodes. The study period began in January 2006 when EBUS-TBNA was introduced in the department and ended in December 2007. All records were reviewed retrospectively. None of the four examiners had any previous experience with EBUS-TBNA or ultrasound when the study began. All examinations were performed under general anaesthesia. Patients without useful cytological material from the EBUS-TBNA were subjected to a supplementary standard cervical mediastinoscopy if the mediastinal lymph nodes were found to be enlarged (>10 mm), PET positive or if the examiner was insecure of the result of the EBUS-TBNA. Patients with mediastinal lymph node involvement, detected by EBUS-TBNA or standard cervical mediastinoscopy, were referred to oncological treatment, while those without mediastinal lymph node involvement underwent – if they were otherwise eligible for surgery – resection and systematic lymph node sampling either by thoracotomy or by video-assisted thoracoscopy. Final mediastinal staging was defined as positive if mediastinal lymph node involvement was detected by EBUS-TBNA, standard cervical mediastinoscopy or surgery, or defined as negative otherwise. Results: A total of 157 patients were included in the study. N2/N3 disease was found in 67 patients (42.6%). EBUS-TBNA missed the mediastinal spread in 10 patients. Five of the ten patients had lymph node metastases in station 5, 6 or 8 – out of reach of EBUS-TBNA or standard cervical mediastinoscopy. EBUS-TBNA had a sensitivity of 0.85 (0.74–0.93) and a negative predictive value of 0.90 (0.82–0.95). No complications occurred from EBUS-TBNA. The number of supplementary standard cervical mediastinoscopies decreased significantly in the study period. Conclusion: The results of this study suggest that staging of the mediastinum with EBUS-TBNA is safe and easy to learn – even without previous experience with ultrasound. The diagnostic yield of EBUS-TBNA is in accordance with the yield of standard cervical mediastinoscopy reported in the literature. We do not find any indications in the present study of the recommended necessity for mediastinoscopy in all EBUS-TBNA-negative patients.  相似文献   

3.
Results of preoperative mediastinoscopy for small cell lung cancer   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
BACKGROUND: The significance of mediastinoscopy for small cell lung cancer is unclear owing to the small number of surgical cases. METHODS: To determine the N component of the TNM staging system, computed tomographic findings and the results of mediastinoscopy were compared with the pathologic examination of surgical specimens. RESULTS: Four cases among 37 patients (10.8%) were determined as inoperable by mediastinoscopy because of mediastinal lymph node metastasis. A thoracotomy was performed in 33 patients. Six patients (18.2%) who had been judged to have no metastasis by mediastinoscopy were found to have N2 disease after examination of the surgical specimens. In the identification of all mediastinal metastases, mediastinoscopy was 40.0% sensitive, 100% specific, and 83.8% accurate. When the superior mediastinal, paratracheal, pretracheal, tracheobronchial, and subcarinal lymph nodes were defined as approachable nodes, mediastinoscopy was 66.7% sensitive, 100% specific, and 94.6% accurate in the evaluation of these restricted nodes. Four cases among 8 patients with cN1 lesions resulted in a designation as pN2. CONCLUSIONS: Mediastinoscopy is useful for the diagnosis of an approachable mediastinal lymph node in small cell lung cancer cases. This exploration is necessary for patients with small cell lung cancer who are diagnosed as cN1 before thoracotomy.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Computed tomography (CT) is the most common method of staging lung cancer. We have previously shown endoscopic ultrasound guided fine-needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) to be highly accurate in staging patients with nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who have enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes on CT scan. In this study we report the accuracy and yield of EUS-FNA in staging patients without enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes by CT. METHODS: Patients with NSCLC and CT scan showing no enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes (> 1 cm for all nodes except > 1.2 cm for subcarinal) in the mediastinum underwent EUS. Fine needle aspiration was performed on at least one lymph node, if present, in the upper mediastinum, aortopulmonary window, subcarinal, and periesophagus regions. Each specimen was evaluated with on-site cytopathology and confirmed with complete cytopathologic examination. RESULTS: Sixty-nine patients without enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes were evaluated. Endoscopic ultrasound detected malignant mediastinal lymph nodes in 14 of 69 patients as well as other advanced (American Joint Committee on Cancer [AJCC] stage III/IV) in 3 others (1 left adrenal, and 2 with mediastinal invasion of tumor) for a total of 17 of 69 (25%, 95% confidence interval: 16% to 34%) patients. Eleven additional patients were found to have advanced disease by bronchoscopy (2), mediastinoscopy (2), and thoracotomy with mediastinal lymph node dissection (7). The sensitivity of EUS for advanced mediastinal disease was 61% (49% to 75%), and the specificity was 98% (95% to 100%). CONCLUSIONS: Endoscopic ultrasound guided fine needle aspiration can detect advanced mediastinal disease and avoid unnecessary surgical exploration in almost one of four patients who have no evidence of mediastinal disease on CT scan. In addition to previously reported results in patients with enlarged lymph nodes on CT, these data suggest that all potentially operable patients with nonmetastatic NSCLC may benefit from EUS staging.  相似文献   

5.
Background : Mediastinal staging is crucial to determine the prognosis and treatment options for patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). In this study, we compared the results of integrated positron emission tomography-computerised tomography (PET/CT) with those of mediastinoscopy in mediastinal staging of NSCLC patients. Methods : PET/CT and mediastinoscopy was performed on 250 consecutive patients diagnosed with NSCLC between September 2005 and March 2008. Thirty-eight patients were excluded from the study. Standard cervical mediastinoscopy was performed in all patients, and simultaneous extended cervical mediastinoscopy was performed in 52 patients with left sided lesions. Patients with negative mediastinoscopy underwent resection. The pathological results were correlated with PET/CT findings.

Results : A total of 212 patients (199 male, 13 female; mean age: 58.3 years) were evaluated. In PET/CT analysis 60 true-positive, 45 false-positive, 103 true-negative and 4 false-negative patients were found. The rate of PET/CT positivity of mediastinal lymph nodes was 49.5%. The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values and accuracy for PET/CT were 93.8%, 69.6%, 57.1%, 96.3% and 76.9% respectively. The incidence of N2 disease in NSCLC patients with negative mediastinal lymph node uptake on PET/CT was 3.7% (4 of 107). In univariate analysis, right upper lobe tumours were significantly (p < 0.05) more associated with occult N2 disease.

Conclusions : In patients with positive mediastinal lymph node uptake on PET/CT invasive mediastinal staging appears necessary for exact staging. Mediastinoscopy can be omitted in NSCLC patients with negative mediastinal uptake on PET/CT in regions where the rate of PET/CT positivity of mediastinal lymph nodes is high.  相似文献   

6.
BACKGROUND: Prospective assessment of accuracy and safety of video-mediastinoscopy (VMS) in patients without pretreatment and those after induction therapy for potentially operable non-small cell lung cancer. METHODS: Between 1996 and 1999, 219 patients underwent VMS at our institution: 195 patients without pretreatment and 24 after completion of induction therapy. Mediastinal lymph nodes were dissected and biopsied according to the American Thoracic Society (ATS) lymph node mapping system using a video-assisted approach. The accuracy of VMS was assessed for each patient according to the results obtained from mediastinal lymph node dissection (MLND) performed during lung resection. RESULTS: Video-mediastinoscopy in patients without pretreatment revealed a sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy as compared with MLND of 87%, 100%, and 95.6%, respectively, and a procedure-related complication rate of 4% (8/195 patients). Video-mediastinoscopy in patients after induction therapy revealed a sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of 81%, 100%, and 91% as compared with MLND, without apparent complications. CONCLUSIONS: Video-mediastinoscopy performed after induction therapy for non-small cell lung cancer is as accurate as mediastinoscopy in patients without pretreatment and did not confer additional morbidity.  相似文献   

7.
纵隔镜R4淋巴结活检在肺癌诊断及分期中的应用价值   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
目的 探讨纵隔镜R4淋巴结活检在肺癌诊断和病理学分期中的应用价值。方法 1999年11月至2004年5月,66例肺癌病人实施了纵隔镜R4淋巴结活检手术,其中常规纵隔镜17例,电视纵隔镜49例;右肺癌47例,左肺癌19例;术前明确诊断为肺癌17例,术前为疑似而术后确诊的肺癌49例。其中纵隔镜检查经颈部62例,胸骨旁1例,颈部加胸骨旁3例。结果 本组66例中,49例R4淋巴结有转移癌,17例R4淋巴结未见转移癌。在47例右肺癌纵隔镜R4淋巴结活检中38例阳性,19例左肺癌中ll例R4阳性。49例术前未明确诊断肺癌者,38例通过纵隔镜R4检查明确了诊断,2例经纵隔镜第5、6组淋巴结活检明确了诊断。小细胞肺癌、腺癌、鳞癌R4淋巴结转移的阳性率分别为100.0%、82.8%和52.0%。全组手术均顺利完成,无严重围手术期并发症和手术死亡。结论 R4组淋巴结是肺癌最重要的淋巴转移部位,纵隔镜R4淋巴结活检对肺癌的诊断、鉴别诊断及分期具有其他检查方法和其他部位淋巴结活检不可比拟的优势。  相似文献   

8.
In our current conception of cancer, lymph nodes represent a pivotal transition between a primary tumor treated by surgical therapy alone and metastatic disease treated by an evolving combination of multimodality therapy. Invasive mediastinal staging provides an opportunity for pre-resectional histologic examination of these pivotal lymph nodes. The disadvantages of mediastinoscopy is that it requires general anesthesia and, in many cases, a delay in surgical resection. The advantages of mediastinoscopy are that it is safe and effective.16 In patients with suspected mediastinal lung cancer (stage III), mediastinoscopy provides lymph node staging and histologic confirmation of tumor type. In these selected patients, we perform sufficiently extensive mediastinal sampling that it is impractical to examine the entire specimen by frozen section. The price of a thorough examination of the lymph nodes is that the therapeutic resection may be delayed a week; nonetheless, the mediastinoscopy is low risk and can be performed as an outpatient procedure. In appropriately selected patients, invasive mediastinal staging provides important histologic information with minimal morbidity.  相似文献   

9.
A. End 《European Surgery》2006,38(1):45-53
Summary BACKGROUND: The prognosis of lung tumors is determined by histology and staging (nodal status). The most common tumor is non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) with a 5-year survival rate of 67 % (stage IA) to <5 % (stage IV). METHODS: By reviewing the literature guidelines for diagnosis and treatment of non-small cell lung cancer and neurendocrine tumors are presented. RESULTS: Functional operability provided, (bi)lobectomy or pneumonectomy with mediastinal lymph node dissection are the standard procedures. In case of positive mediastinal lymph nodes (stage IIIA/IIIB) induction chemo(radio)therapy is indicated. Cervical mediastinoscopy is performed in patients with enlarged mediastinal nodes (CT >1 cm), especially in PET-positive cases. Adjuvant chemotherapy is used in clinical trials. Small-cell lung cancer (SCLC, neuroendocrine tumor grade III) has a poor prognosis, and is treated with chemotherapy; resection may be performed in early stages. Neuroendocrine tumors grade I (typical carcinoid) are resected by segmentectomy, lobectomy, or bronchoplastic resection. Neuroendocrine tumors grade II (atypical carcinoids) are treated like NSCLC. CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of lung cancer is decreased by tobacco control, and the chances of survival are improved by early detection and multimodality regimens.   相似文献   

10.
OBJECTIVE: Video-assisted mediastinal lymphadenectomy (VAMLA) increases quality of mediastinal lymph node staging in bronchial carcinoma. The video-mediastinoscope allows systematic lymphadenectomy by bimanual preparation. Complete bilateral resection of lymph nodes in stations 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7 (Naruke) can safely be done after visualization of limiting structures (trachea, main bronchi, oesophagus, pericardium, pulmonary artery, aorta, upper vena cava and azygos vein). In this initial study, we compared histopathological findings from VAMLA with final lymph node staging from subsequent thoracotomy. METHODS: Between January 2001 and December 2001, 25 patients were operated by VAMLA (among 162 mediastinoscopies), two patients for diagnostic purposes and 23 for staging of bronchial carcinoma. Eighteen patients underwent subsequent thoracotomy for tumor resection and systematic lymphadenectomy. Pathological findings were reviewed. RESULTS: In VAMLA, lymph node dissection of station 2R, 2L and 4R was achieved in 96, 28 and 92%, respectively, whereas resection of lymph nodes in station 7 and 4L was performed in 100%. Other locations were dissected in 44%. A mean of 8.6 lymph nodes were removed in each patient. No residual lymph node tissue was found in the subcarinal compartment at open surgery. When comparing histopathological staging from VAMLA with final pathology, there were no false negative results. Seventeen patients who had N0 disease at VAMLA proved to be N0 or N1 at thoracotomy, one patient diagnosed as N2 at mediastinoscopy had N2 disease at final pathology. The only complication observed in VAMLA was a blood loss of >100 ml in 12% of patients without need for transfusion or surgical intervention. CONCLUSION: Mediastinal lymph node staging is improved by VAMLA. A systematic lymphadenectomy is performed bimanually through the video mediastinoscope. The number of lymph nodes removed is doubled compared to standard mediastinoscopy. There were no false negative results at final pathology. This new technique presents the basis for video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) lobectomy because complete resection of the mediastinal lymph nodes can be achieved by VAMLA. Potential complications of VAMLA such as injury of major mediastinal vessels, airways, pneumothorax or recurrent laryngeal nerve injury indicate the need for a full thoracic surgical infrastructure.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: Mediastinal staging of non-small-cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) by mediastinoscopy suffers from a low sensitivity, leading to a number of patients with unforeseen N2 disease at thoracotomy. This study was undertaken to assess whether pre-operative staging could be improved by serial sectioning and immunohistochemical staining of mediastinoscopy biopsies. METHODS: In 183 consecutive patients with NSCLC, a thoracotomy was performed after a thorough mediastinal staging by computed tomography scan and cervical mediastinoscopy. In 158 patients (88%), a mediastinal node dissection was performed, revealing unforeseen N2 disease in 24 cases (15%). The preserved mediastinoscopy biopsies of these patients were retrospectively serially sectioned and stained with MNF 116. RESULTS: Metastases could be identified in seven cases (30%), reducing unforeseen N2 disease from 15 to 10%. The number of patients who could theoretically benefit from neo-adjuvant therapy would have been increased by at least 10%. CONCLUSIONS: Pre-operative mediastinal staging can be improved considerably by serial sectioning and immunohistochemical staining of mediastinoscopic biopsy specimens.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to investigate the significance of mediastinoscopy for clinical stage I non-small cell lung cancer. METHODS: We reviewed 291 patients who underwent mediastinoscopy from January 1995 to December 2001 for clinical stage I non-small cell lung cancer. The patients who presented tumor-negative lymph nodes on mediastinoscopy underwent thoracotomy for pulmonary resection and mediastinal lymph node dissection in the same operative session. Mediastinoscopy-positive patients were referred for neoadjuvant therapy. RESULTS: Of the 291 patients, 20 patients (6.9%) were found with N2 or N3 disease on mediastinoscopy. Among 271 mediastinoscopy-negative patients, thoracotomy-proven N0 was found in 201 patients (74.2%), N1 in 44 patients (16.2%), and N2 in 25 patients (9.2%). Seventeen of 25 patients with unforeseen N2 disease had positive lymph nodes in the station that could be approached by mediastinoscopy only. The positive rate of mediastinoscopy was significantly higher in the patients with nonbronchioloalveolar-type adenocarcinoma than in squamous cell carcinoma (11.5% vs 3.3%, p = 0.013). However, there was no difference in the mediastinoscopy-positive rate between clinical T1 and T2 status. CONCLUSIONS: Though there are still controversies about routine mediastinoscopy in patients without mediastinal nodal enlargement on chest computed tomography scan, this study demonstrates that routine mediastinoscopy is necessary, especially for nonbronchioloalveolar-type adenocarcinoma patients.  相似文献   

13.
Today several methods for invasive mediastinal staging of lung cancer are available. Whereas mediastinoscopy and anterior mediastinotomy had been the gold standard in every situation several years ago, today EBUS-TBNA has been developed as an alternative to mediastinoscopy concerning the status of lymph node positions?2 L?/?R, 4 L?/?R and 7. Actually mediastinoscopy is accepted as the gold standard only in special situations such as negative cytology of suspicious lymph nodes after EBUS-TBNA and mediastinal evaluation after neoadjuvant treatment.  相似文献   

14.
Kumar P  Yamada K  Ladas GP  Goldstraw P 《The Annals of thoracic surgery》2003,76(3):872-6; discussion 876-7
BACKGROUND: The diagnostic and staging value of cervical mediastinoscopy is well established. Left anterior mediastinotomy is of further value in assessing left upper lobe tumors. However the efficacy and safety of both these procedures after median sternotomy for cardiac surgery is unknown. METHODS: We undertook a retrospective review of our experience of mediastinal exploration by cervical mediastinoscopy with or without left anterior mediastinotomy in patients with prior sternotomy between 1980 and 2001. RESULTS: During this period 28 patients (25 male and 3 female; mean age, 63 +/- 10 years), all with prior sternotomy for cardiac surgery (14 had left internal mammary artery graft), underwent mediastinal exploration. The mean interval between sternotomy and mediastinal exploration was 7.2 +/- 5.1 years. Additionally, 3 patients also had superior vena cava obstruction. Cervical mediastinoscopy was performed in all 28 patients and additionally left anterior mediastinotomy was undertaken in 7 of 28 patients (4 with left internal mammary artery graft). Indications for exploration were staging of lung cancer in 22 patients (cervical mediastinoscopy, n = 22; left anterior mediastinotomy, n = 7) and diagnostic biopsy of mediastinal mass in 6 patients (cervical mediastinoscopy, n = 6). Thorough mediastinal assessment was possible in all 28 patients. In the 22 patients with lung cancer the median number of lymph node stations sampled during mediastinoscopy was 3 (range, 1 to 5). A specific diagnosis was obtained in 16 patients (metastatic lung cancer, n = 10; lymphoma, n = 3; sarcoidosis, sinus histiocytosis, and metastatic melanoma, n = 1 each). The other 12 patients with negative findings underwent pulmonary resection and only 1 of 12 (8%) patients had unexpected N2 disease, a similar proportion to our overall experience with lung cancer. There were no operative complications. CONCLUSIONS: Prior sternotomy for cardiac surgery does not compromise the efficacy and the safety of mediastinoscopy and mediastinotomy.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the impact of endoesophageal ultrasound-guided fine-needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) on management of thoracic malignancies. METHODS: One hundred and twenty patients referred for invasive diagnostic and resection of thoracic malignancies were studied prospectively. Negative and inconclusive EUS-FNA findings were assessed by video-assisted mediastinoscopic lymphadenectomy (VAMLA) or open lymphadenectomy. RESULTS: One hundred and twenty patients, aged 64.1 years (range 38-85) underwent 120 EUS-FNA, 53 video-assisted mediastinoscopic and 48 open lymphadenectomies for diagnosis and treatment of 99 lung carcinoma, six lung metastases, five mesothelioma, three lymphoma, and eight other conditions. EUS-FNA showed T4 in 15/120 and adrenal or hepatic metastases in 9/120 cases. Prevalence of mediastinal lymph node metastases was 51.7%. EUS-FNA false-negative rate was 25.3%. EUS-FNA sensitivity was 91.7%, 78.1% and 43.8% for bulky disease, enlarged mediastinal nodes or normal nodes on CT scan, 50% and 96.6% for right- and left-sided tumours, and 80.6%, 78.9%, 23.8% and 25.0% for the lymph node stations 7, 5/6, 4R, and 4L. A 38.3% respectively 100% cut-down of mediastinoscopies leads in 7.5% respectively 20.8% to incorrect treatment decisions. CONCLUSIONS: EUS-FNA sensitivity depends on the localisation of the primary tumour, and extent and location of mediastinal disease. For left-sided tumours, EUS-FNA improves mediastinal staging by assessing stations 5 and 6 inaccessible to conventional mediastinoscopy. For extended mediastinal disease, mediastinoscopy can be avoided or spared for restaging after neoadjuvant therapy. Exclusion of mediastinal involvement requires mediastinoscopy or open lymphadenectomy. Beyond mediastinal nodal staging, EUS-FNA may detect T4 and M1 situations. Thus, EUS-FNA is a useful supplement to and not the replacement of mediastinoscopy.  相似文献   

16.
Specific indications for a second or remediastinoscopy include an inadequate first procedure, metachronous second primary or recurrent lung cancer, lung cancer after unrelated disease, and restaging after induction therapy. Nowadays, restaging is the most frequent indication for remediastinoscopy. Only patients with proven mediastinal downstaging will benefit from a subsequent surgical resection. In contrast to imaging or functional studies, remediastinoscopy provides pathological evidence of response after induction therapy. Although technically more challenging than a first procedure, remediastinoscopy can select patients for subsequent thoracotomy and provides prognostic information. Technically, mediastinal dissection is usually started at the left paratracheal side to avoid the innominate artery. Under the aortic arch, dissection proceeds in the pretracheal plane until the subcarinal nodes are reached. Sensitivity of a second mediastinoscopy is lower than a first procedure but in the most recent series it is higher than 70% with an accuracy around 85%. Survival also depends on the findings of remediastinoscopy, patients with persisting mediastinal involvement having a poor prognosis. An alternative approach consists of the use of minimally invasive staging procedures as endobronchial or endoscopic esophageal ultrasound to obtain an initial proof of mediastinal nodal involvement. Mediastinoscopy is subsequently performed after induction therapy to evaluate response. In this way, a technically more difficult remediastinoscopy can be avoided.  相似文献   

17.
The primary treatment of lung cancer depends on tumor stage. Chest CT scan and bronchoscopy are used to define the TNM stage and resectability. In case of lung cancer without mediastinal lymph node enlargement or direct mediastinal involvement (clinical stage I-IIb + T3N1) surgical treatment is recommended. The use of adjuvant chemotherapy has to be defined, but will be indicated in stage II and IIIa. Expected 5-year survival achieves 40 to 80 % depending on tumor stage. Exceeds the shorter diameter of mediastinal lymph nodes in chest CT scan more than 1 cm (or in case of positive PET scan) mediastinoscopy is indicated. In case of N2-disease and after tumor response to preoperative chemotherapy (about 60 %) secondary resection of the tumor leads to higher 5-year survival rates (20-40 %) compared to patients without induction therapy (5-20 %). In these patients and after unexpected detection of solitary lymph node metastasis by primary resection adjuvant mediastinal radiotherapy should be added. If the tumor has infiltrated the mediastinum or the upper sulcus (T3/4) and/or mediastinal lymph nodes are obviously tumor burden (e. g. > 3 cm, N2 bulky, N3) radical primary resection may not be possible. In these patients combined radio- and chemotherapy induces a high percentage of tumor regression and can be used before secondary resection (5-year survival 5-20 %). Locally advanced tumors infiltrating the main bronchus close to the carina or the carina itself and tumors with metastases in the same lobe, both without mediastinal lymph node metastases (T3/4N0-1), can be resected by sleeve pneumonectomy and lobectomy with satisfactory results respectively. In patients with resectable lung cancer and no clinical sign of tumor disease (f. e. anemia, weight loss, pain) limited staging procedure with chest CT scan including upper abdomen and bronchoscopy is reasonable. In the remaining patients complete staging is necessary. We recommend an interdisciplinary approach to patients with lung cancer.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: In left lung cancer, left and right mediastinum lymphatic spread occur equally frequently. We evaluated the safety and effectiveness of thoracoscopic right upper mediastinal dissection, implemented prior to left lung resection for left lung cancer. METHODS: Between January 1999 and May 2000, 17 patients with left lung cancer underwent thoracoscopic right upper mediastinal dissection prior to resection of the left lung and left mediastinal dissection for left lung cancer. These patients had either enlarged left hilar or bilateral mediastinal nodes, or either a tumor at least 3 cm in diameter or tumor extension to the hilum, mediastinum, or chest wall. Tumor and lymph nodes were examined with hematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemical staining of cytokeratin for micrometastasis. RESULTS: In 3 patients (17.6%), metastasis occurred in right paratracheal nodes. The 30-day mortality was 0% and morbidity 35.3% (6/17). Postoperative complications occurred in 3 of 4 patients (75%) undergoing induction chemotherapy, but none were lethal. CONCLUSION: Thoracoscopic right upper mediastinal dissection is safe and feasible in treating advanced left lung cancer.  相似文献   

19.
Video-assisted mediastinoscopy: experience from 240 consecutive cases   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
BACKGROUND: We report our experience with video-assisted mediastinoscopy. METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed clinical records of all patients who underwent video-assisted mediastinoscopy in a 26-month period. Video-assisted mediastinoscopy was performed in the presence of enlarged lymph nodes (short axis > 1 cm) found at computed tomography scan. Data about operative time, node stations sampled, number of biopsies, and operative complications were collected. Results of the pathologic examination were recorded, as well as (when different) the definitive diagnosis. RESULTS: Video-assisted mediastinoscopy was performed in 240 consecutive patients. In 2 patients, the technique was employed for resection of a mesothelial cyst. In the other cases, it was used for diagnosis of enlarged nodes or staging of lung cancer. Mean number of biopsies was 6.0; mean number of sampled nodal stations was 2.3. Mean operative time was 36.6 minutes. Two operative complications occurred: a pneumothorax not requiring drainage and an injury to the innominate artery requiring manubrial split and suture. In 192 patients, the definitive diagnosis was lung cancer (18 small-cell lung cancers). In the remaining 46 patients, video-assisted mediastinoscopy allowed establishment of the diagnosis (sarcoidosis, n = 22; reactive hyperplastic lympho-adenitis, n = 13; tuberculosis, n = 4; involvement by malignancies other than lung cancer, n = 7). Among the 174 patients with non-small cell lung cancer, mediastinal nodal involvement was recognized in 107 cases (N3, n = 28; N2, n = 79). Sixty-seven patients were staged N less than 2; 47 underwent thoracotomy. Postthoracotomy staging agreed with video-assisted mediastinoscopy staging in 44 cases (93.6%). CONCLUSIONS: Video-assisted mediastinoscopy proved to be safe and effective in nodal assessment of the mediastinum.  相似文献   

20.
For patients with lung cancer preoperative evaluation of the mediastinal lymph nodes is important to estimate local operability and/or to consider the necessity of neoadjuvant treatment. Cervical mediastinoscopy is generally accepted as a safe and highly accurate procedure in the staging of lung cancer. Nodes accessible to CM are the levels of the superior (level 2R and 2L) and inferior (level 4R and 4L) paratracheal and subcarinal (level 7) nodal stations. Additionally extended CM and left parasternal mediastinotomy allow the exploration of the aortopulmonary window (level 5) and anterior mediastinal nodes (level 6). In locally advanced lung cancer repeat mediastinoscopy was used after induction chemotherapy or chemoradiation to reexplore the upper mediastinum in order to select patients with a higher probability to undergo complete resection. Operative mortality of both investigations is less than 0.5%; the preoperative complication rate is very low (less than 4%). Because of the higher sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy, mediastinoscopy and repeat mediastinoscopy are superior to new methods like FDG-PET, FDG-PET/CT, EBUS-FNA, and EUS-FNA.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号