1. Safety and efficacy of salvage surgery for non-small cell lung cancer: a retrospective study of 46 patients from four Keio-affiliated hospitals
- Author
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Shigeki Suzuki, Keisuke Asakura, Masayuki Okui, Makoto Sawafuji, Takao Shigenobu, Atsushi Tajima, Kaoru Kaseda, Kyohei Masai, Tomoyuki Hishida, and Hisao Asamura
- Subjects
Salvage Therapy ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Lung Neoplasms ,Chemoradiotherapy ,General Medicine ,Hospitals ,Postoperative Complications ,Treatment Outcome ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Surgery ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Neoplasm Staging ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Advances in drug therapy and radiotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer resulted in an increased number of salvage surgeries for initially unresectable tumors. This study aimed to evaluate the safety and efficacy of salvage surgery for non-small cell lung cancer.We defined salvage surgery as (1) surgery for local recurrence/residual tumor after definitive chemoradiotherapy/radiotherapy (salvage surgery in a narrow sense) or (2) conversion surgery after non-surgical treatment. We retrospectively analyzed patients who underwent salvage surgery at four Keio University-affiliated hospitals.Forty-six patients were included. The initial clinical stage was I in 4 patients (9%), III in 19 (41%), and IV in 23 (48%). Initial treatment before salvage surgery was chemoradiotherapy in 10 patients (24%), radiotherapy in 4 (9%), and drug therapy in 32 (67%). Pneumonectomy, lobectomy, segmentectomy, and wedge resection were performed in 2 (4%), 37 (80%), 3 (7%), and 4 (9%) patients, respectively. Complete resection was achieved in 41 patients (89%). Postoperative complications occurred in 11 patients (24%). Initial chemoradiotherapy/radiotherapy was an independent predictor of postoperative complications (odds ratio 10, p = 0.03). The 30- and 90-day mortality rates were 0 and 2%, respectively. The 5-year overall and progression-free survival rates were 66 and 30%, respectively.The safety and efficacy of salvage surgery for non-small cell lung cancer were acceptable. Salvage surgery was a viable treatment option for selected patients with recurrent/residual tumors after non-surgical treatments.
- Published
- 2022
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