Objectives: Notwithstanding preoperative staging, a number of procedures still end in an exploratory thoracotomy as a result of unexpected findings. The aim of this work is to evaluate the validity of routine videothoracoscopy, performed as the first step of every planned resection for non-small cell lung cancer, to assess tumor resectability and feasibility of the resection through thoracoscopy.
Methods And Results: From November 1991 to December 2007, in our department, 1306 patients with non-small cell lung cancer, judged operable at conventional staging, underwent videothoracoscopy before the operation. Thoracoscopy revealed inoperability in 58 (4.4%) patients, mostly owing to pleural dissemination (2.5%) or mediastinal infiltration (1.7%). In the remaining 1248 (95.6%), thoracoscopy did not reveal inoperability. Of these, 449 (34.4%) underwent thoracoscopic resection. The other 799 (61.2%) underwent thoracotomy: 767 underwent resection, but 32 (2.5%) had an exploratory thoracotomy. Thoracoscopy had suggested unresectability in 7 (0.5%) patients, had been incompletely carried out in 4 (0.3%), and was unfeasible in 21 (1.6%) owing to insurmountable technical reasons. In our previous series from 1980 to 1991 the exploratory thoracotomy rate had been 11.6%. In the present series, after the introduction of routine thoracoscopy in the staging process, the exploratory thoracotomy rate was 2.5%. Thoracoscopy was reliable in excluding unresectability (negative predictive value 0.97). The global percentage of correct staging was significantly better (P < .0001) by thoracoscopy (73.3%) than by computed tomography (48.7%). Considering T descriptor, video-assisted thoracic surgery correctly matched with final pathologic staging in 96.2% of patients.
Conclusions: Routine preliminary videothoracoscopy ensured assessment of tumor resectability and feasibility of the resection through thoracoscopy and limited unnecessary thoracotomies.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jtcvs.2009.03.055 | DOI Listing |
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