Results of radical treatment of stage IIIa non-small-cell carcinoma of the lung |
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Authors: | G Maggi |
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Institution: | Thoracic Surgery Unit, University of Torino, Italy. |
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Abstract: | From 1979 to 1987, 907 patients with non-oat cell carcinoma of the lung were subjected to thoracotomy: of these, 685 (75.5%) underwent radical resection of the lung tumour. The 230 stage IIIa patients were studied in this paper. These were divided into three groups. First group: 93 patients with only local parietal or mediastinal spread without involvement of the mediastinal lymph nodes (T3N0-1M0); the 5-year survival of this group was 35% (44.1% when the ribs and muscles were not affected). A second group of 118 patients had tumour spreading to the mediastinal lymph nodes, but without local involvement (T1-2N2M0): this group had a 5-year survival of 22.3%. The 5-year survival was better in patients without metastases in the subcarinal lymph nodes than in patients with them (23.76% versus 12.89%). Skipping of lymphatic levels was frequent: 37% of patients with metastasis to mediastinal lymph nodes did not have metastases in the lymph nodes of the lung; 10% of tumours removed by lobectomy had metastases in the lymph nodes of the residual lobe. The third group with parietal and lymphatic mediastinal invasion (T3N2M0) had a poor survival (13.5% at 5 years). The author concludes that it is possible to achieve an acceptable 5-year survival in selected cases with metastasis to mediastinal lymph nodes: when the CT scan demonstrated mediastinal lymph nodes larger than 1.5 cm, mediastinoscopy was carried out and, if positive, the patient was judged inoperable. |
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