Science and Research

The Role of Thoracic Surgery in Small Cell Lung Cancer - A Large Longitudinal Analysis (2002-2015) Based on Real-World Data

BACKGROUND: Most SCLC patients are diagnosed with extensive disease (ED) and the prognosis in this cohort remains poor. However, some patients are diagnosed with limited (LD) or very limited (VLD, T1-2, N0-1, M0) disease and previous data suggest that surgical resection might improve outcomes in these patients. Most of the existing evidence comes from small case series. For this reason, we investigated clinical features and surgical outcomes in a large cohort of resected SCLC patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We used a large pseudomized dataset (n = 32432) provided by the Munich Cancer Registry to analyze all documented SCLC patients (n = 5043) between 2002 and 2015. We correlated patients' characteristics as well as surgery modalities with survival data and describe trends in the role of surgery in SCLC over the time. RESULTS: We analyzed 5043 SCLC patients. A total of 161 (3.2%) received either oncological (lobectomy, bilobectomy and pneumonectomy) or limited resection (segmentectomy and wedge resection). We found a significant trend suggesting that resections in SCLC patients become less common in all stages of disease, accompanied by an increased proportion of oncological resections. This suggests a more accurate preoperative staging. In VLD resection was significantly associated with longer survival compared to nonsurgical management (log-rank P = .013). Survival was better with oncological resection compared to atypical resection. Administration of adjuvant chemotherapy was associated with better outcome in all resected patients (P = .01). CONCLUSION: VLD SCLC patients benefit from oncological resection. We recommend invasive staging in these patients to ensure VLD. Furthermore, adjuvant chemotherapy should be offered to all resected patients.

  • Kauffmann-Guerrero, D.
  • Walter, J.
  • Kovács, J.
  • Sellmer, L.
  • Hatz, R. A.
  • Behr, J.
  • Schubert-Fritschle, G.
  • Tufman, A.
  • Schneider, C. P.

Keywords

  • Extensive disease
  • Limited disease
  • Multimodal treatment
  • Sclc
  • Surgical management
Publication details
DOI: 10.1016/j.cllc.2022.01.004
Journal: Clin Lung Cancer
Work Type: Original
Location: CPC-M
Disease Area: LC
Partner / Member: KUM
Access-Number: 35221252

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