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The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, Vol 46, 24-28, Copyright © 1988 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
JR Hankins, JE Miller, M Salcman, F Ferraro, DC Green, S Attar and JS McLaughlin
Between 1964 and 1986, 19 patients underwent resection of both a primary
lung cancer and the associated brain metastasis. One patient underwent
resection of 2 separate primary lung cancers and the associated metastases.
The 12 men and 7 women ranged in age from 42 to 67 years (mean, 54.6
years). The cell type was adenocarcinoma in 12 tumors, squamous or
adenosquamous cell in 5, large cell undifferentiated or anaplastic in 2,
and malignant carcinoid in 1 tumor. The types of resection were as follows:
lobectomy for 12 neoplasms, pneumonectomy for 5, bilobectomy for 2, and
wedge resection for 1 neoplasm. Radiotherapy to the brain was given in
connection with sixteen of the twenty craniotomies. The patient with 2
separate primary neoplasms survived 19 years before dying 5 months after
the second craniotomy. The mean survival is 8.0 +/- 2.1 years (+/- the
standard error), and the median survival is 1.67 years. Survival at 1 year
was 65 +/- 10.7% and at 5 years, 45 +/- 11.1%. On univariate analysis, the
following factors were found to correlate significantly with longer
survival: a lung tumor in Stage I or II; negative mediastinal nodes;
curative rather than palliative resection of the lung tumor; and age
younger than 55 years. However, on multivariate analysis, only curative
resection was a significant factor (p less than 0.01). We believe these
results justify continued application of this combined surgical approach to
patients having limited-stage lung cancer with a solitary brain metastasis.
ARTICLES
Surgical management of lung cancer with solitary cerebral metastasis
Department of Surgery, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore.
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