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Ann Thorac Surg 2002;73:412-415
© 2002 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
a Division of Surgery, Toneyama National Hospital, Toyonaka, Japan
b Division of Surgery, Kinki Central National Hospital for Chest Diseases, Sakai, Japan
c Division of Surgery, South Fukuoka National Hospital, Fukuoka, Japan
d Division of Surgery, Sapporo-Minami National Hospital, Sapporo, Japan
e Division of Surgery, Okinawa National Hospital, Ginowan, Japan
f Division of Medicine, Seiranso National Hospital, Naka County, Japan
Accepted for publication October 17, 2001.
* Address reprint requests to Dr Sawabata, Division of Surgery, Toneyama National Hospital, 5-1-1 Toneyama, Toyonaka, Osaka, Japan 560-8552
e-mail: nori{at}toneyama.hosp.go.jp
| Abstract |
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Methods. Records of surgical patients with NSCLC were reviewed, with a definition of minor pleural effusion as less than 300 mL. The patients were divided into three groups as follows: (1) group C consisted of patients who underwent grossly complete resection; group I, patients with incomplete tumor resection; and group E, patients who underwent exploratory thoracotomy only.
Results. There were 196 patients who had minor pleural effusion; of these, 96 (46%) underwent an examination to define the malignancy status of pleural effusion after surgery. In 43 patients (45%), the effusion was found to be malignant. The median survival time and 5-year survival rate, respectively, were 13 months and 9% for group C (n = 11); 34 months and 10% for group I (n = 14; p = 0.3); and 17 months and 0% for group E (n = 18; p = 0.8).
Conclusions. Tumor resection is not beneficial for the survival of patients with NSCLC who have a minor malignant pleural effusion.
| Introduction |
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There are little data on minor pleural effusions detected after thoracotomy in patients with NSCLC. Notwithstanding the fact that malignant minor pleural effusion is defined as T4 in the latest staging system, which was published in 1997 [4], it is not known whether surgery is beneficial for patients with NSCLC accompanied by malignant minor pleural effusion.
We conducted a retrospective study to clarify whether resection is beneficial for patients with NSCLC and minor pleural effusion that is found during thoracotomy.
| Material and methods |
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To assess whether surgical resection is beneficial for patients with malignant minor pleural effusion without pleural dissemination, three groups of patients were compared. The first group included patients who underwent grossly complete resection even when they had malignant minor pleural effusion without pleural dissemination (group C); the second included patients who underwent incomplete resection (group I); and the third consisted of patients who underwent exploratory thoracotomy only (group E).
Surgical-pathologic staging was carried out according to the New International Staging System for Lung Cancer [5]. Pleural involvement was classified into four grades based on the Japan Lung Cancer Society classifications [6], as follows: (1) p0 = tumor with no pleural involvement or reaching the visceral pleura but not extending beyond the elastic layer; (2) p1 = tumor extending beyond the elastic and the visceral layer but not to the pleural surface; (3) p2 = tumor exposed on the pleural surface but not involving parietal pleura; and (4) p3 = tumor involving parietal pleura or organs adjacent to the lung.
Survival curves were obtained according to the Kaplan-Meier method. Comparison of survival curves was carried out using the log-rank test. Patient characteristics as well as surgical and pathologic variables were compared using analysis of variance or the
2 test. Statistical calculations were conducted with Stat View (Abacus Concepts Inc, Berkeley, CA); p values of less than 0.05 were accepted as statistically significant.
| Results |
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As shown in Table 1, there were no differences in demographic characteristics, histology, or N status. However, both T and P status were at an earlier stage in group C when they were defined excluding the malignant status of the pleural effusion.
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Overall, there were 40 patients who died due to lung cancer (27 cases of distant metastasis and 13 cases of local relapse). Among the 13 cases of local relapse, 9 cases were pleural carcinomatosis (2 cases were group C, 2 in group I, and 5 in group E). Survival for all patients with malignant minor pleural effusion was 13 months in MST and 9% in 5-YSR (Fig 1). As shown in Figure 2, survival curves for each group were similar. The median survival time and 5-year survival rate, respectively, were 13 months and 9% for group C, 34 months and 10% for group I (p = 0.3), and 17 months and 0% for group E (p = 0.8).
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| Comment |
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Patients with advanced NSCLC accompanied by pleural effusion cannot undergo operation and therefore should not be treated surgically. Nonsmall cell lung cancer with pleural effusion is classified as a high-stage disease. In contrast, a review from the Mayo Clinic [9] demonstrated that even cytologically negative pleural effusion was predictive of unresectability in 95% of these patients; nevertheless, 5% of them were found on thoracotomy to have limited resectable disease, and all were long-term survivors. These researchers concluded that among patients with cytologically negative effusion, resectability must be documented surgically. Naruke and colleagues [10] reported that the 5-year survival rate of 40% among 112 patients with nonmalignant effusion was similar to the 5-year survival rate among 1,298 patients without pleural effusion. They concluded that surgical resection seems favorable when the pleural effusion is not malignant.
Positive malignancy in pleural lavage during thoracotomy is reported as an unfavorable prognostic factor for patients with NSCLC without malignant pleural effusion or pleural dissemination [1115]. Therefore, the malignant status of pleural effusion may be a poor prognostic factor for patients with minor pleural effusion without pleural dissemination. Ratto and colleagues [16] demonstrated the prognostic significance of minor pleural effusion for surgical patients with NSCLC. They found that patients with minor pleural effusion showed a median survival time of 14 months. In the 50% of this group who underwent resection, this time increased to 37 months. However the significance of positive malignancy for long-term survival cannot be inferred from their report, because 19 of 20 patients (95%) showed negative malignancy for the pleural effusion. Our study revealed that 45% of the minor pleural effusion was malignancy positive, and patients who underwent grossly complete resection, notwithstanding a malignant minor pleural effusion, had a median survival time of 13 months and a 5-year survival rate of 9%. This is similar to that of patients who underwent either incomplete resection or only exploratory thoracotomy.
Shimizu and colleagues [17] studied pleuropneumonectomy in comparison to limited surgery plus parietal pleurectomy among patients with NSCLC accompanied by pleural dissemination. This study revealed the 5-year survival rate for pleuropneumonectomy to be 19% and for limited surgery plus parietal pleurectomy 35.5%. Shiba and associates [18] studied the prognosis of patients with NSCLC along with subclinical malignant pleural effusion. According to their investigation, the 5-year survival rate for patients without macroscopic dissemination was 22.9%. These patients underwent pleural therapy by exposure to mitomycin-C at the time of closing. Adjuvant therapy or moderately aggressive resection may be beneficial for the survival of patients with NSCLC along with malignant pleurisy.
Thoracoscopic surgery has become available and, thus, the status of pleural effusion and the pleural space can be examined with limited intervention before thoracotomy [19, 20]. In our present study, distant metastasis was the cause of death in 68% of cases; therefore, induction therapy may be beneficial. If thoracoscopic surgery were undertaken before thoracotomy to explore the status of pleural effusion, induction therapy might be carried out for patients with malignant minor pleural effusion.
In conclusion, surgical resection is not beneficial for patients with malignant minor pleural effusion, even if there is no pleural dissemination, due to the poor prognosis for this disease. Patients who underwent either incomplete resection or exploratory thoracotomy had a similarly poor prognosis. A trial of aggressive resection including the pleura or multimodality treatment is warranted for patients with NSCLC together with malignant minor pleural effusion.
| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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