(Chest. 2000;117:104S-109S.)
© 2000
American College of Chest Physicians
Surgical Therapy of Early Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer*
Jean Deslauriers, MD and
Jocelyn Grégoire, MD
*
From the Centre de pneumologie de lHôpital Laval, Sainte-Foy, Quebec, Canada.
Correspondence to: Jean Deslauriers, MD, Centre de pneumologie de lHôpital Laval, 2725 chemin Sainte-Foy, Sainte-Foy, Quebec, Canada G1V 4G5
 |
Abstract
|
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Approximately 45% of all lung carcinomas are limited to the
chest, where surgical resection is not only an important therapeutic
modality, but in many cases, the most effective method of controlling
the disease. Patients with T1N0 and T2N0 tumors have early lung cancer,
and most are curable by resection, with 5-year survival rates in the
range of 75 to 80% for patients with T1N0 status. Patients with
smaller tumors do better than patients with larger ones, while visceral
pleural invasion does not seem to influence survival. Histologic type
is also a significant prognostic variable, with squamous tumors having
a better prognosis than tumors of nonsquamous histology. Other known
prognostic factors are age and gender of the patient and completeness
of resection. The "gold standard" of surgery remains lobectomy,
regardless of tumor size at presentation. Stage T1N1 and T2N1
carcinomas represent a group of patients where the disease involves
hilar and bronchopulmonary nodes. This group is best treated by
complete resection with mediastinal lymphadenectomy. Tumor size and
histology are significant prognostic variables, and 5-year survival
after complete resection is in the range of 40 to 50%. Postoperative
radiation therapy may improve local control, while chemotherapy results
in a slightly reduced risk of death.
Key Words: early-stage non-small cell lung cancer stage I non-small cell lung cancer surgery
 |
Introduction
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Lung
cancer is a significant health problem, with approximately 170,000 new
cases being diagnosed annually in the United States. Of these, about
45% are limited to the thorax, where surgery is not only an important
therapeutic modality, but in many cases, the most effective method of
controlling the disease. Of all resectable tumors, 28% are T1N0
lesions, which have a high cure rate, and 37% are T1N1, T2N0, and T2N1
lesions, which have a somewhat lower cure rate.
In the revised stage grouping of TNM subsets, stage I patients have
been subclassified into two subsets (I-a and I-b) because end-results
reports consistently show a better outcome for patients with T1N0M0
disease (stage I-a) than for those with T2N0 disease (stage I-b;
p < 0.01; Table 1
).1
Similarly, patients with T2N1M0 tumors and those with
T3N0M0 disease have been regrouped in stage II-b, because little
difference was observed in their cumulative 5-year survival
rates.1
The reported survival after resection of early stage non-small cell
lung cancer (NSCLC) varies a great deal in the literature, and factors
such as characteristics of the study population, sophistication of the
staging process, or length of follow-up have a significant bearing on
the end result.2
The extent of intraoperative staging and
the nodal map used by surgeons reporting end results are particularly
relevant, even if the two series that compared mediastinal
lymphadenectomy to systematic node sampling failed to show a difference
in pathologic stage TNM.3
4
Level 10 node, for instance,
is an N1 node in the American Joint Committee of Cancer staging
map5
but an N2 node in the American Thoracic Society
map.6
These differences are recognized, and a unified
nodal mapping system has recently been proposed by Mountain and
Dresler.7
The length of follow-up available in end-results reports may also
influence survival figures, because early stage NSCLC includes
notoriously slow-growing neoplasms, and longer follow-up intervals may
be necessary before final assessment of survival
differences.8
This review will summarize the survival information available for the
various TNM subsets of early stage NSCLC. It is acknowledged that
nearly all of these data come from surgical series where resection of
the primary tumor was the mainstay of treatment.
 |
Surgical Management of T1N0M0 AND
T2N0M0 LUNG CANCER
|
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According to the TNM staging system (Table 2
), stage I tumors are defined as those without lymph node metastasis
(N0) that are completely surrounded by lung parenchyma or that do not
extend beyond the visceral pleura or within 2 cm of the
carina.1
9
The prognosis for surgically treated patients
with T1N0M0 NSCLC is generally good, and 5-year survival figures
approximate 80%. In a series from the Mayo Clinic, the survival of 225
patients who had T1N0 lesions was 91% at 2 years and 80% at 5
years.10
In that series, TNM subset (T1 vs T2), age at
operation (< 70 years vs > 70 years), gender (women vs men), and
extent of operation (limited resection and lobectomy vs pneumonectomy
or bilobectomy) were important determinants of survival. There were no
differences in survival on the basis of cell type, although the 5-year
survival rate was slightly better in patients with bronchioloalveolar
carcinoma (81%). In 1990, Thomas and Rubinstein8
reviewed
the sites of cancer recurrences in 907 patients with T1N0 disease
enrolled in Lung Cancer Study Group (LCSG) protocols. The median
survival was approximately 8 years, and the median time to recurrence
of malignancy, including new primaries, was 7.5 years. Brain, bone, and
mediastinum were the most common sites of recurrences in decreasing
order of frequency. That study and a follow-up article11
also showed that the recurrence rate decreases with time after
resection, whereas the rate of new primary lung cancer increases with
time, and can be as high as 1 to 2%/yr. Thus, early detection
techniques12
and continued patient surveillance are
particularly applicable to this cohort of patients.
A summary of prognostic factors in resected stage I lung cancer is
listed in Table 3
. Tumor size does make a difference in the survival of patients with
T1N0M0 and T2N0M0 lung carcinomas.13
14
15
16
In 1995, Martini
et al14
showed that patients with T1 lesions do better
than those with T2 lesions, and that patients with small tumors (< 1
to 2 cm) do better than patients who have tumors
5 cm in diameter.
Survival in patients with T1N0 tumors was 82% at 5 years and 74% at
10 years, compared with 68% at 5 years and 60% at 10 years for
patients with T2 tumors (p < 0.0004). In that series, nearly 60% of
all recurrences occurred within the first 2 years of follow-up, and
second primary cancers in the lung or at other sites developed in 34%
of patients.14
In a group of 221 patients with a primary
lung cancer
3.0 cm (T1 tumors), Ishida et al15
also
showed that 5-year survival rates decrease with increase in tumor size.
This was attributed to an increase in the incidence of occult lymph
node metastasis in larger tumors (N1, 5%, and N2, 12% in tumors from
1.1 to 2.0 cm; N1, 12%, and N2, 25% in tumors from 2.1 to 3.0 cm) not
detected preoperatively or even by intraoperative lymph node sampling.
Visceral pleura involvement does not seem to influence the survival of
patients with stage I disease,14
although Ichinose et
al17
were able to document by univariate analysis of
survival curves that pleural involvement was a significant prognostic
factor. These investigators observed a survival difference between
patients having tumors not extending beyond the elastic layer of the
visceral pleura (p0), tumors extending beyond the elastic layer but not
exposed on the pleural surface (p1), and tumors exposed to the pleural
surface (p2). These investigators also identified other significant
prognostic factors, including tumor size (T1 vs T2), tumor
differentiation (well differentiated vs moderately or poorly
differentiated), artery invasion, lymphatic vessel invasion, and degree
of DNA ploidy pattern (diploid vs aneuploid).17
18
Histologic type of the tumor is a fairly consistent determinant of time
to recurrence and survival in patients with resected stage I
carcinoma.19
20
21
In a LCSG analysis, cancer recurrences
were more frequent and recurrence rates were higher in patients with
tumors of nonsquamous histology (Table 4
).19
However, this advantage disappeared after 5
years.11
In other LCSG data, 5-year survival following
surgery in patients with T1N0 tumors was 83% for squamous carcinomas
and 69% for adenocarcinomas (p = 0.02); for patients with T2N0
tumors, these rates were 64% and 57%, respectively.21
22
In some series, the survival advantage for patients with tumors of
squamous histology was only seen in smaller-size
tumors.23
24
The level of bronchial invasion often determines the tumor (T) status,
because a tumor < 3 cm in diameter is considered T1 if there is no
proximal invasion to a lobar bronchus, and T2 when the lesion involves
the main bronchus.1
9
Several articles have now shown that
survival is excellent after surgery in superficial tumors confined to
the bronchial mucosa and without nodal involvement
(N0).15
25
26
These tumors are now classified as T1 tumors
even if they are located within 2 cm of the carina.1
The presence of satellite nodules within the primary lobe has also been
identified as a poor prognostic factor,27
and in the
revised TNM classification, these are considered T4
tumors.1
Blood vessel invasion has been inconsistently
shown to have prognostic significance in early stage lung cancer,
although two recent studies from Europe28
29
have provided
data supporting the concept that the absence of blood vessel invasion
identifies a group of patients with very low probability of distant
metastases.
Role of Limited Resection in Surgical Management of T1N0 and T2N0
Lung Cancer
The current "gold standard" of surgical treatment for patients
with T1N0 and T2N0 tumors limited to a lobe is an anatomic lobectomy,
regardless of the size of tumor at presentation. Limited resections,
which are defined as procedures that are less than lobectomy (generally
a wide wedge for peripheral tumors or an anatomic segmentectomy), were
introduced by Jensik et al,30
who suggested that more
limited operations could be adequate for early stage bronchogenic
carcinoma. In this series, 69 patients underwent intentional segmental
resection for peripheral tumors. Survival rates of 56.4% at 5 years
and 26.8% at 15 years were reported, and the investigators concluded
that these figures supported the validity of segmental resection in
selected cases of lung cancer. Since then, many authors have adopted
this approach as a compromise to lobectomy for high-risk patients with
limited function (Table 5
).31
32
33
34
35
Other possible indications for limited resections
include patients with synchronous bilateral tumors and selected
patients with very peripheral T3 tumors (ie, superior sulcus
tumors), where the majority of the malignancy involves the chest wall
rather than the pulmonary parenchyma. The theoretic advantages of
limited resection are listed in Table 6
. Possible disadvantages include the potential for increased local
recurrence and mortality and an increased operative morbidity,
consisting primarily of prolonged air leaks.
More recently, some centers have advocated lesser resections as
appropriate treatment for uncompromised patients with peripheral T1N0
tumors not transgressing a segmental plane (Table 7
).24
36
37
In 1994, the Rush-Presbyterian-St. Lukes
Medical Center group presented the results of a retrospective study
concerning 173 patients who had undergone segmental resection
(n = 68) or lobectomy (n = 105) for stage I NSCLC over an 8-year
interval (from 1980 to 1998).38
While a survival advantage
was noted for patients with tumors
3 cm undergoing lobectomy
(p = 0.006), no survival advantage was apparent for patients
undergoing lobectomy for tumors < 2 cm in diameter (p = 0.24). The
overall local recurrence rate was higher after segmental resection
(22.7%) than after lobectomy (4.9%). In another study, Landreneau et
al39
compared the results of open wedge resection,
video-assisted wedge resection, and lobectomy in a nonrandomized trial
involving 219 patients with pT1N0M0 lung cancer. They concluded
that anatomic lobectomy should remain the surgical treatment of choice
because of increased risk for local recurrence and death after limited
resection.
In 1995, the LCSG published the results of a prospective randomized
trial comparing limited resection (wedge or segmental) to lobectomy for
patients with peripheral T1N0 NSCLC.40
Of the 276
randomized patients, 247 were eligible for analysis. In the
limited-resection group, there was a threefold increase in the
incidence of local recurrences, especially high among patients with
adenocarcinoma, and an observed 30% increase in overall mortality rate
(p = 0.08) when compared to patients undergoing lobectomy. In that
study, there were no observed late (12 to 18 months) functional
advantages or decreased operative mortality in the limited-resection
group. The analysis also showed a significantly higher local recurrence
rate after wedge resection vs segmentectomy, presumably because of
inadequate margins around the tumor or failure to identify microscopic
N1 disease. Thus, the appropriate application of video-assisted
thoracic surgery procedures, whether they are wedges or lobectomies for
the treatment of early stage NSCLC, remains to be
clarified.41
42
 |
Surgical Management of T1N1M0 AND
T2N1M0 LUNG CANCER
|
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T1N1M0 and T2N1M0 lung cancers include those where the disease
involves bronchopulmonary and hilar nodes but without metastases to
mediastinal nodes. The T1N1M0 subset is infrequent, and the 5-year
survival rate after complete resection is 55% (Table 1)
.1
Survival is in the range of 40% for patients within the T2N1M0 subset.
In 1983, Martini et al43
reported the results of treatment
in 75 patients with NSCLC and pN1 disease. In that study, the
survival of 62 patients treated by resection alone was 49% at 5 years.
In a more recent report from the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center, 214 patients with resected T1N1 (n = 35) and T2N1 (n = 174)
NSCLC lesions were analyzed with respect to survival and prognostic
factors.44
In that series, the best survival rates were
observed in patients with tumors
3 cm in diameter, and in patients
who had a single node involved. Martini et al insisted that this group
of patients should be treated surgically and that complete resection
with mediastinal lymphadenectomy is necessary to ensure that no nodal
metastasis in the mediastinum is overlooked. In similar analysis, the
Ludwig Cancer Study Group has reported median survival figures of 4.8
and 2.3 years for patients with T1N1 and T2N1 disease,
respectively.45
46
Similar to what is observed in T1N0M0 and T2N0M0 subsets, the
histologic classification of the tumor is a significant prognostic
factor. In LCSG data, the 5-year survival rate following surgery was
75% for squamous cell carcinoma and 52% for adenocarcinoma in the
T1N1 subset (p = 0.04), and 53% for squamous cell carcinoma and 25%
for adenocarcinoma in the T2N1 category (p = 0.01).21
22
Similarly, Ichinose et al17
have shown in a multivariate
analysis that histologic classification (squamous vs nonsquamous;
p = 0.0359) was a predominant prognostic factor in patients with
pT1N1 and pT2N1 disease. Naruke et al47
also
observed differences in survival based on histology. In 1992, however,
Martini et al44
failed to demonstrate a difference in
survival between patients with squamous carcinoma vs adenocarcinoma
(p = 0.238), although the pattern of recurrence after resection of
T1N1 or T2N1 tumors differed by histology. Local or regional recurrence
was more frequent in patients with squamous carcinoma, whereas distant
metastases were more commonly seen in adenocarcinomas, with the brain
as the most frequent site of metastasis. In that series, there was no
significant difference in survival between patients whose tumors had
visceral pleural invasion compared with those who did not
(p = 0.294).
The location and number of N1 nodes as prognostic factors has been
looked at by Martini et al44
and Yano et
al.48
In the study by Martini et al,44
there
was a statistically significant (p = 0.016) difference in survival
rates between patients with involvement of a single N1 node (45% at 5
years) vs multiple N1 nodes (31% at 5 years). In a study of 78
patients with pathologic N1 disease, Yano et al48
also
reported that the survival associated with lobar N1 disease
(stations 12 to 14) was significantly (p = 0.014) better than that of
hilar N1 disease (station 10; American Joint Committee on Cancer nodal
map; 64.5% vs 39.7% at 5 years).
The role of adjuvant therapy in these subsets of patients has been
addressed by many cooperative groups. In a LCSG trial, 210 patients
with complete resection of stage II (T1N1, T2N1) or stage III squamous
carcinoma received either surgery plus radiotherapy (n = 102) or
surgery alone (n = 108).49
There was no survival benefit
from radiotherapy, but a significantly lower rate of local recurrences
(p < 0.001). Based on these results, it may be advisable to
irradiate these patients postoperatively in order to maintain their
quality of life for the longest possible time. There have been no
clinical trials of adjuvant radiation therapy for stage T1N1 or T2N1
nonsquamous cell carcinomas.
Although some studies have suggested that chemotherapy administered in
the postoperative setting may prolong survival and disease-free
interval in the patients with stage II disease,50
51
a
recent meta-analysis showed that postoperative chemotherapy with or
without radiotherapy only resulted in a slightly reduced (statistically
nonsignificant) risk of death among patients with surgically resected
stage II and III-a.52
53
Feld and
colleagues50
from the LCSG recently reported the results
of a prospective randomized trial utilizing an adjuvant cisplatin-based
regimen (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, cisplatin) vs control in
patients with completely resected T1N1 and T2N0 NSCLC. There was no
difference between treatment and control groups with respect to time of
recurrence or survival, and the site of first recurrence was distant in
74% of patients. Although a number of ongoing trials are currently
evaluating new chemotherapy regimens to be given postoperatively in
patients with complete resection of T1N1 and T2N1 tumors, one of the
main problem remains patient compliance with the regimen, which, in the
postoperative setting, is in the range of 50 to 60%.50
At present, there is some evidence that retinoid or high-dose vitamin A
chemoprevention may reduce the recurrence rate and improve the
disease-free interval in patients curatively resected for stage I lung
cancer.54
 |
Conclusion
|
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Although it is clear that early stage NSCLC is best treated by
surgical resection, the survival of patients with disease stages other
than T1N0 is still in the 40 to 50% range. These figures must be
improved by the addition of induction or adjuvant regimens, and based
on the available literature, it is reasonable to suppose that
combination induction chemotherapy or chemoradiation would be useful in
these subsets of patients. In the future, the use of better imaging
techniques such as positron emission tomography or use of
video-assisted thoracic surgery to document N1 disease may help the
selection of patients for these therapies.
 |
Footnotes
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Abbreviations: NSCLC = non-small cell lung cancer;
LCSG = Lung Cancer Study Group
 |
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