Dl. Miller et al., RESULTS OF SURGICAL RESECTION IN PATIENTS WITH N2 NONSMALL CELL LUNG-CANCER, The Annals of thoracic surgery, 57(5), 1994, pp. 1095-1101
From January 1982 to December 1986, 167 patients (121 men and 46 women
) with non-small cell lung cancer and a clinically negative mediastinu
m were found to have N2 lymph node metastases at thoracotomy and under
went pulmonary resection. Ages ranged from 31 to 86 years (median, 66
years). Adenocarcinoma was present in 70 patients (41.9%), squamous ce
ll carcinoma in 64 (38.3%), large cell carcinoma in 20 (12.0%), adenos
quamous cell carcinoma in 7 (4.2%), and bronchoalveolar cell carcinoma
in 6 (3.6%). Forty-seven patients (28.1%) underwent mediastinoscopy;
all results were negative. Pneumonectomy was performed in 64 patients,
bilobectomy in 4, lobectomy in 76, segmentectomy in 2, and wedge exci
sion in 21. Twenty patients had an incomplete resection. Thirty-five p
atients (21.0%) had complications, and the operative mortality was 4.8
% (8 of 167 patients). Sixty-seven patients (40.1%) received adjuvant
radiation therapy. The 5-year survival for the 147 patients who underw
ent complete resection was 23.7%. In contrast, 19 of the 20 patients (
95.0%) who underwent incomplete resection died within 3 years. Other f
actors that significantly affected the 5-year survival were the number
and location of metastatic lymph node stations, age, type of resectio
n, and whether adjuvant radiation therapy was administered. We conclud
e that, when N2 disease is found at thoracotomy, complete resection is
warranted to achieve long-term survival.