Surgical Treatment for Limited Small-cell Lung Cancer. The University of Toronto Lung Oncology Group Experience
Overview
Affiliations
Since 1977, 119 patients with limited small-cell lung cancer have undergone combined modality therapy including surgery at our institution. Seventy-nine patients (58 male, 21 female; median age 63 years) had surgery first, and 67 of these had adjuvant chemotherapy. Forty (27 male, 13 female; median age 59 years) had chemotherapy first, and 94% had a complete or partial response before the operation. Pretreatment staging revealed 69 stage I, 27 stage II, and 23 stage III tumors. Twenty-six patients required pneumonectomy, 88 lobectomy, and five had no resection. Four patients had gross and six had microscopic residual disease. Postoperative pathologic examination showed small-cell lung cancer only (n = 95), non-small-cell lung cancer (n = 3), mixed (n = 17), and no residual tumor (n = 4). Postoperative staging revealed 35 stage I, 36 stage II, and 48 stage IIIa tumors. The median survival of the entire group is 111 weeks and the projected 5-year survival rate is 39%. No survival difference was seen between patients treated with chemotherapy before the operation and those undergoing an initial operation followed by chemotherapy (p = 0.756). The median survival for patients with pathologic stage I disease has not been reached, and the projected 5-year survival rate is 51%. This is significantly better than for the patients with stage II (median 82 weeks, p = 0.001) or stage III (median 83 weeks, p = 0.001) disease, who have projected 5-year survival rates of 28% and 19%, respectively. Seven of the 12 patients who had no adjuvant chemotherapy remain alive at 6 to 48+ months. Sixty-seven patients have died (11 had no evidence of disease). Only 10 patients had a relapse in the primary site alone, seven at the primary and distant sites, and 39 only in distant sites. In summary, resection improves control at the primary site, and a significant proportion of patients with stage I (N0) disease achieve long-term survival and cure with combined modality therapy including surgery. Stage II and IIIa patients have survival predictions similar to stage IIIa non-small-cell lung carcinoma treated surgically.
Pozonec V, Pozonec M, Aigner C, Widder J, Boettiger K, Megyesfalvi Z Curr Opin Oncol. 2024; 37(1):27-34.
PMID: 39625049 PMC: 11623382. DOI: 10.1097/CCO.0000000000001111.
New perspectives in the management of small cell lung cancer.
Pangua C, Rogado J, Serrano-Montero G, Belda-Sanchis J, Alvarez Rodriguez B, Torrado L World J Clin Oncol. 2022; 13(6):429-447.
PMID: 35949427 PMC: 9244973. DOI: 10.5306/wjco.v13.i6.429.
Role of surgery in a case-control study of patients with clinical stage IIIA small cell lung cancer.
Li S, Jin K, Pan Y, Wu C, Ren S, Jiang G J Thorac Dis. 2021; 13(5):2738-2745.
PMID: 34164166 PMC: 8182514. DOI: 10.21037/jtd-20-3047.
Adjuvant treatment in lung cancer.
Taboada Valladares B, Crespo P, Herranz U, Gomez Caamano A J Clin Transl Res. 2021; 7(2):175-184.
PMID: 34104820 PMC: 8177857.
The current role of surgery and SBRT in early stage of small cell lung cancer.
Farre N, Belda-Sanchis J, Guarino M, Tilea L, Cordero J, Martinez-Tellez E J Clin Transl Res. 2021; 7(1):34-48.
PMID: 34104807 PMC: 8177012.