Background: We conducted this study to investigate the need for dissection of station 9 lymph nodes during upper lobectomy for non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and to find out the operative results of inferior pulmonary ligament division.
Methods: A total of 840 patients who underwent upper lobectomy for NSCLC between January 2007 and June 2020 were evaluated retrospectively. The patients were separated into two groups - those having undergone lymph node dissection of station 9 and inferior pulmonary ligament dissection (Group I) and those who did not (Group II). In these groups, the prognostic value of station 9 lymph nodes and postoperative effects (drainage time, prolonged air leak, dead space and length of hospital stay) of ligament division or preservation were analyzed.
Results: The number of patients with station 9 lymph node metastasis was only one (0.1%) and that was multi-station pN2 disease. Station 9 lymph nodes were found in 675 (80.4%) patients, while 22 (2.6%) patients had no lymph nodes in the dissected material. In the other 143 (17%) patients, the inferior pulmonary ligament and station 9 were not dissected. While 5-year survival was 64.9% in 697 patients of Group I, it was 61.3% in 143 patients of Group II ( = 0.56). There was no statistically significant difference between the groups in postoperative effects of ligament division or preservation.
Conclusions: In upper lobectomies, status of station 9 does not have a significant impact on patients' survival and lymph node staging. Additionally, preservation or division of the inferior pulmonary ligament has no significant advantage or disadvantage.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00015458.2021.1958189 | DOI Listing |
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