Dual intervention to improve pathologic staging of resectable lung cancer
Abstract
Background Detection of lymph node metastasis is of immense prognostic value in patients with resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but routine pathologic nodal staging is suboptimal. To determine the impact on the rate of detection of nodal metastasis, we tested dual intervention with a prelabeled lymph node specimen collection kit to improve intraoperative node dissection and a fastidious gross dissection of the lung resection specimen for intrapulmonary lymph nodes. Methods We matched dual-intervention cases with controls staged using standard surgical specimen collection and pathologic examination protocols. Controls were hierarchically matched for extent of resection, laterality, surgeon, pathologist, and T stage. All statistical comparisons were made with exact conditional logistic regression, to account for the matched case-control design. Results One hundred dual-intervention cases were matched with 100 controls. The dual interventions resulted in approximately a 3-fold increase in the number of lymph nodes examined and the number of lymph nodes with metastasis detected; they also increased the proportion of patients with lymph node metastasis from 21% to 35% (p = 0.02). There were strong trends toward higher aggregate stage distribution, and eligibility for postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy in the dual-intervention cases. Conclusions The combination of interventions improved the thoroughness and accuracy of pathologic nodal staging. A prospective randomized trial to test the survival impact of the dual interventions is warranted. © 2013 by The Society of Thoracic Surgeons.
Publication Title
Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Recommended Citation
Osarogiagbon, R., Ramirez, R., Wang, C., Miller, L., Smeltzer, M., Sareen, S., Javed, A., Robbins, S., Khandekar, A., Wolf, B., Gibson, J., Spencer, D., & Robbins, E. (2013). Dual intervention to improve pathologic staging of resectable lung cancer. Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 96 (6), 1975-1981. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2013.07.009