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Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital Experts Consensus on the Management of Ground-Glass Nodules Suspected as Lung Adenocarcinoma (Version 1)

Authors :
Gening JIANG
Chang CHEN
Yuming ZHU
Dong XIE
Jie DAI
Kaiqi JIN
Yingran SHEN
Haifeng WANG
Hui LI
Lanjun ZHANG
Shugeng GAO
Keneng CHEN
Lei ZHANG
Xiao ZHOU
Jingyun SHI
Hao WANG
Boxiong XIE
Lei JIANG
Jiang FAN
Deping ZHAO
Qiankun CHEN
Liang DUAN
Wenxin HE
Yiming ZHOU
Hongcheng LIU
Xiaogang ZHAO
Peng ZHANG
Xiong QIN
Source :
Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer, Vol 21, Iss 3, Pp 147-159 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Chinese Anti-Cancer Association; Chinese Antituberculosis Association, 2018.

Abstract

Background and objective As computed tomography (CT) screening for lung cancer becomes more common in China, so too does detection of pulmonary ground-glass nodules (GGNs). Although anumber of national or international guidelines about pulmonary GGNs have been published,most of these guidelines are produced by respiratory, oncology or radiology physicians, who might not fully understand the progress of modern minimal invasive thoracic surgery, and these current guidelines may overlook or underestimate the value of thoracic surgery in the management of pulmonary GGNs. In addition, the management for pre-invasive adenocarcinoma is still controversial. Based onthe available literature and experience from Shanghai Pulmonary Hospital, we composed this consensus about diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary GGNs. For lesions which are considered as adenocarcinoma in situ, chest thin layer CT scan follow-up is recommended and resection can only be adopt in some specific cases and excision should not exceed single segment resection. For lesions which are considered as minimal invasive adenocarcinoma, limited pulmonary resection or lobectomy is recommended. For lesions which are considered as early stage invasive adenocarcinoma, pulmonary resection is recommend and optimal surgical methods depend on whether ground glass component exist, location, volume and number of the lesions and physical status of patients. Principle of management of multiple pulmonary nodules is that primary lesions should be handled with priority, with secondary lesions taking into account.

Details

Language :
Chinese
ISSN :
10093419 and 19996187
Volume :
21
Issue :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.29d6289cabc54fef87fb657603cd8347
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3779/j.issn.1009-3419.2018.03.05