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1.
Mediastinoscopy and mediastinotomy are used primarily in the staging of lung cancer; they are also of value in biopsying mediastinal masses and lymph nodes to establish diagnoses such as sarcoidosis,lymphoma, and mediastinal tumors. Video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) was introduced in 1990 and has now replaced open thoracotomy in the evaluation of many pleuropulmonary disorders. Specific advantages of VATS over open thoracotomy include the use of smaller incisions, reduced operative morbidity, and optimal visualization of the entire lung and pleural space. In many centers it has become the procedure of choice for the biopsy of interstitial disease, indeterminate lung nodules, or pleural lesions. The role of VATS for staging of lung cancer patients is still under debate.VATS procedures have also been adopted for the treatment of a wide range of thoracic disorders. With increasing experience surgeons have become more skilled with this limited access technique and meanwhile lobectomies can be performed safely.The role of VATS in the management of lung metastases or lung cancer is still being investigated. It is a concern that there is a temptation to do less when a minimal access operation is performed that does not allow for palpation of the lung. In addition, lymph node dissection cannot be performed adequately and there continue to be reports of local recurrences in port sites. If the VATS approach is to be used, surgeons should always respect the oncological principles that have been developed over the past decades.  相似文献   

2.
The accuracy of staging of lung cancer is reflected by the extent of mediastinal lymph node sampling. The more extensively a patient is tested, the more likely there will be the accurate N-stage diagnosed. Adequate lymph node dissection during surgery for lung cancer therefore requires complete dissection of all three ipsilateral mediastinal compartments including the infracarinal region. Additional contralateral mediastinal lymph node exploration may not be justified. A direct therapeutic effect of mediastinal lymph node removal may be attributed to the prevention of local tumor growth. However, its overall prognostic significance remains unclear because it must be assumed that proven tumor within the mediastinal lymph nodes reflects the state of tumor generalization that may not be cured by localized therapeutic means. New systemic interventions are clearly warranted to significantly improve prognosis in stage II and III lung cancer patients.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
T Arita  T Kuramitsu  M Kawamura  T Matsumoto  N Matsunaga  K Sugi    K Esato 《Thorax》1995,50(12):1267-1269
BACKGROUND--The incidence of metastases to mediastinal lymph nodes was evaluated in patients with normal sized mediastinal nodes on the computed tomographic (CT) scan who underwent thoracotomy. The use of hilar lymph nodes in predicting mediastinal lymph node metastases was also assessed. METHODS--Ninety patients with non-small cell lung cancer who later underwent thoracotomy wer prospectively examined by CT scanning. Lymph nodes with a short axis diameter of 10 mm or more were considered abnormal. RESULTS--Mediastinal lymph node metastases were present at thoracotomy in 19 patients (21%). In 14 these lymph node metastases were misdiagnosed because the nodes were normal in size on the CT scan. In only one of the 19 patients with N2 nodes was an N1 lymph node enlarged, and four of the 19 patients with N2 nodes had metastases to these mediastinal nodes without N1 disease ("skipping metastases"). CONCLUSIONS--Metastases in normal sized nodes seen on the CT scan are a major problem in staging. Hilar lymph nodes did not help to predict reliably the presence or absence of metastases to the mediastinal lymph nodes.  相似文献   

5.
There is a great deal of concern about metastasis of lung cancer to regional lymph nodes, due partly to the work of groups of thoracic surgeons in Japan and North America beginning in the 1970s. The classification of regional lymph node stations for lung cancer staging published by Mountain and Dresler has been widely adopted for more than ten years. Anatomic landmarks for 14 levels of intrapulmonary, hilar, and mediastinal lymph nodes stations are designated. Skip transfer and occult lymph node metastasis, confirmed by studies regarding the mode of spread of intrathoracic lymphatic metastasis, are two theoretical bases for complete mediastinal lymphadenectomy of lung cancer. However, whether or not the degree of the dissection influences prognosis, the role of systematic nodal dissection (SND) vs mediastinal lymph node sampling (MLD) in resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains controversial. A systematic literature search was performed to identify relevant reports, making full use of the 'Cited by,' 'Related Records,' 'References,' and 'Author Index' functions in the PubMed and ISI Web of Science databases. This paper presents a review of the role of mediastinal lymph node distribution and methods of determining suitability for hilar and mediastinal lymphadenectomy based on the four subsets of stage IIIA-N2, balancing the cost vs effect of mediastinal lymph node dissection in resectable NSCLC, focusing on the stage migration bias in clinical trials comparing SND and MLS, recommending a reasonable node dissection sequence, improving the prospects for the perioperative anti-tumor therapy based on mediastinal lymphadenectomy, and evaluating the various preoperative staging techniques. Finally, we believe that, besides the role of complete resection and accurate staging, the complete mediastinal lymphadenectomy is the core component of the lung cancer multidisciplinary therapy, and suggest that the values of lymphadenectomy should be further assessed using decision-tree analysis based on large-scale prospective randomized trials and pooled analysis to evaluate the costs vs effects.  相似文献   

6.
K M Kerr  D Lamb  C G Wathen  W S Walker    N J Douglas 《Thorax》1992,47(5):337-341
BACKGROUND: The use of computed tomography in mediastinal staging of lung cancer relies on the premiss that malignant lymph nodes are larger than benign ones. This hypothesis was tested by linking node size and presence or absence of malignancy and looking at factors possibly influencing the size of benign nodes. METHODS: All accessible mediastinal lymph nodes were taken from 56 consecutive patients with lung cancer who underwent thoracotomy. Nodes were measured and histologically examined. Resected cancer bearing lung from 44 of these patients was assessed for degree of acute and chronic inflammation. RESULTS: Lymph node size was not significantly related to the presence of metastatic disease, 58% of malignant and 43% of benign lymph nodes measuring over 15 mm. Similarly, there was no statistically significant relation between size of lymph nodes and the likelihood of malignancy, 20% of lymph nodes of 10 mm or more but also 15% of those less than 10 mm being malignant. Thresholds of 15 and 20 mm showed similar results. The maximum size of benign lymph nodes was significantly greater in those patients with histological evidence of acute pulmonary inflammation than in those without. CONCLUSIONS: The study shows that in patients with lung cancer (1) malignant mediastinal lymph nodes are not larger than benign nodes; (2) small mediastinal lymph nodes are not infrequently malignant; and (3) benign adenopathy is more common in patients with acute pulmonary inflammation.  相似文献   

7.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of positron emission tomography with 2-fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose (PET-FDG) in the preoperative staging (N and M staging) of patients with lung cancer. The authors wanted to compare the efficacy of PET scanning with currently used computed tomography (CT) scanning. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Results of whole-body PET-FDG imaging and CT scans were compared with histologic findings for the presence or absence of lymph node disease or metastatic sites. Sampling of mediastinal lymph nodes was performed using mediastinoscopy or thoracotomy. RESULTS: PET-FDG imaging was significantly more sensitive, specific, and accurate for detecting N disease than CT. PET changed N staging in 35% and M staging in 11% of patients. CT scans helped in accurate anatomic localization of 6/57 PET lymph node abnormalities. CONCLUSION: PET-FDG is a reliable method for preoperative staging of patients with lung cancer and would help to optimize management of these patients. Accurate lymph node staging of lung cancer may be ideally performed by simultaneous review of PET and CT scans.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Mediastinal lymph node status has important prognostic and therapeutic implications for nonsmall cell lung cancer patients. Consequently, an accurate pathologic assessment of mediastinal lymph nodes for metastasis is essential. Despite the significance of nodal assessment, practice patterns among surgeons vary widely. Therefore we reviewed the literature to provide evidence-based recommendations regarding the ideal means and extent of preoperative and intraoperative pathologic mediastinal lymph node staging in non-small cell lung cancer patients. We found that the most sensitive and accurate intraoperative method is a complete mediastinal lymph node dissection. Pathologic evaluation of at least 10 mediastinal lymph node from at least three stations should be performed at the time of surgery.  相似文献   

10.
Micrometastasis to lymph nodes in stage I left lung cancer patients   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
BACKGROUND: To evaluate the frequency and clinicopathological characteristics of lymph node micrometastasis in left lung cancer patients diagnosed to be stage IA and IB based on routine histopathologic examinations, we examined the lymph nodes in patients who had undergone an extended mediastinal lymphadenectomy, using immunohistochemical methods. METHODS: Paraffin-embedded tissue sections from the lymph nodes in 49 patients with stage I left lung cancers were studied. We used AE1/AE3 as the anticytokeratin and Ber-EP4 as the antiepithelial cell antibodies when performing immunohistochemical staining. RESULTS: We identified micrometastasis of the lymph nodes in 13 (26.5%) of 49 patients with stage I left lung cancer. NO disease was reclassified as N1 disease in 5 cases, N2 disease in 6 cases, and N3 disease in 2 cases. The location of the micrometastatic lymph nodes proved to be wide regions including the contralateral and highest mediastinal nodes, and 6 (46.2%) out of the 13 patients with micrometastasis were thus presumed not to be completely eliminated by a standard lymphadenectomy through an ipsilateral thoracotomy. The five year survival rate of patients with reclassified N1 to N3 disease was 74%, and the presence of micrometastasis was found to have no significant effect on the outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: The micrometastatic involvement of the lymph nodes was both more frequent and extensive than expected even in stage I left lung cancer. These results suggest that an extended mediastinal lymphadenectomy may therefore be required for the locoregional control of stage I left lung cancer patients.  相似文献   

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