Methods: Twenty patients (16 males, 4 females; mean age 58.3 years; range 41 to 76 years) who had a clinical and radiological suspicion of malignancy, who underwent an exploratory thoracotomy since diagnostic methods proved ineffective, and whose pathological results were reported as SCLC between January 1998 and January 2008 were reviewed retrospectively. Ten upper lobectomies, two lower lobectomies, six pneumonectomies and two inferior bilobectomies were performed along with radical lymph node dissection. All cases were evaluated according to age, gender, diagnostic methods, the operations performed, postoperative follow-up and survival results.
Results: The results of the postoperative histopathological assessments were reported as small-cell lung cancer and mixed type tumors were observed in 11 cases. Five of the cases were stage 1, six were stage 2, and nine were stage 3. During the postoperative period all cases received chemotherapy, and radiotherapy was applied to the cases with nodal metastases. The five-year survival rate was calculated as 76% for stage 1 and 2 cases, 13% for stage 3 cases and 86% and 15% for N0 and N1-2 cases, respectively.
Conclusion: Surgical treatment for SCLC can be considered in early stage (T1-2 N0) cases. In the presence of N2, a surgical approach should be avoided. Postoperative chemotherapy should be applied after surgical resection, and mediastinal radiotherapy should be added in cases with nodal metastasis.
We reviewed our own surgical experience in order to examine the role of surgery in the treatment of SCLC. Additionally, we discussed the follow-up results of our 20 SCLC cases who had resection surgery along with chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy while also reviewing the literature on the topic.
Postoperative follow-ups of patients were performed through routine and periodic controls. The Kaplan- Meier method was used to acquire survival curves. The log-rank test was used in order to compare survival curves, and the chi-square test was used to compare group differences. A value of p<0.05 was accepted as significant.
Taking into account all patients, the five-year survival rate was calculated at 41% with an average survival duration calculated as 56.8 months (Figure 1). The early stage (stage I and stage II, 11 patients in total) five-year survival rate was 76% with an mean survival of 90 months. On the other hand, for nine stage III patients, the five-year survival rate was only 13% with an average survival of 11.7 months. When early and late stage cases were compared, the statistical difference between those cases was significant (p=0.004; Figure 2). For N0 cases, the five-year survival rate was 86%, and the average survival rate was 97.9 months. For N1-N2 cases, the results were 15% and 15.8 months, respectively. When N0 cases were compared with N1-N2 cases, the statistical difference was significant (p=0.021; Figure 3).
Figure 1: General survival chart for all cases.
Figure 2: General survival chart for stage I-II and stage III.
Although there has been an over 80% general response and 50% accurate response to treatment during the initial chemotherapy stage of SCLC, recurrences developed in a large majority of cases within two years. Along with the characteristic features of SCLC, mixed histopathologies have played an important role in the high incidence of local and systemic recurrence along with, in some cases, an inaccurate treatment response to chemotherapy.[3] Approximately 30% of recurrences are local, about 30% are systemic and local, and the remaining recurrences are systemic.[3,7,8] Mixed type pathology, especially the resistance of the nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) component and other neuroendocrine pathologies to chemotherapy, negatively affects the success of chemotherapy. In 11 of our cases, mixed type pathology was determined.
Because of cases in which combined chemotherapy and radiotherapy treatment was insufficient along with incidences of high local recurrences which resulted in death, attention was redirected to the treatment combinations that include surgical resection. Early reports of sporadic cases that received surgical treatment were followed by results of retrospective and prospective series. Shields et al.,[9] Meyer and Parker[2] and Shepherd et al.[10] were pioneers of such studies (Table 1).[11-13]
Early stage (T1-2, N0) SCLC patients in whom surgical resection is planned should be subject to a through preoperative evaluation in accordance with the system based on tumor (T), node (N), metastasis (M) staging. Stage I SCLC is less than 5% of all SCLC cases. Cases that have clinically exceeded the T1-2, N0 stage are not expected to benefit from surgery.[14] For cases that are clinically stage I (T1-2, N0), surgery could be considered after an evaluation with thoracic CT, upper abdominal tomography, bone scintigraphy, cranial tomography, and PET. In order to eradicate hidden nodal metastasis before resection, mediastinoscopy should be performed, or for lymph nodes which cannot be assessed by mediastinoscopy, another surgical evaluation should be undertaken.[15] The possibility of small lymph nodes in SCLC being metastatic is higher compared with NSCLC. Moreover, the postoperative pathological stage in cases where mediastinoscopy was performed is generally more advanced than the preoperative clinical stage. N2 existence has been determined in about 30% of the cases where N2 could be identified neither clinically nor mediastinoscopically.[3,5,9] Similarly, N2 that was not identified mediastinoscopically or by other diagnostic surgical methods was present in eight of our cases. In these, it was only identified through a postoperative histopathological review. The probability of such a situation is higher, especially in central tumors.[5]
Medullary bone uptake is a very rare possibility in cases not in the extensive stage and where systemic metastasis is not identified. In a series of 403 cases, the medullary bone uptake could only be identified in seven of the cases (1.7%). Accordingly, performing a medullary bone biopsy for the purpose of staging is accepted as an optional examination.[16]
Surgical resection significantly reduces the probability of local recurrence in SCLC and is not naturally expected to have an impact upon systemic recurrences.[4,17] It is known that having the combined systemic effects of chemotherapy and the local control effects of surgical resection increases the success of treatment. Moreover, impeding the progress of disease via chemotherapy will increase the feasibility of surgical resection. Past studies demonstrate that chemotherapy induction before surgical resection is obviously a beneficial approach in diagnosed stage I cases.[2,14] For patients who have been preoperatively diagnosed and have undergone neoadjuvant chemotherapy before resection, re-staging should be performed after chemotherapy and before surgery.[4,15]
Complete resection should be the preferred surgical approach. Even in cases where curative resection is believed to have been performed, micrometastasis probability should always be kept in mind, and chemotherapy should be applied after surgery. It has been reported that chemotherapy following surgical treatment in N0 a nd N 1 cases is a proper treatment approach and a proper treatment option to extend survival.[3,5,7] In cases having nodal metastasis, mediastinal radiotherapy should be applied in addition to postoperative chemotherapy.[3] In our series, all of the patients underwent curative resection and adjuvant chemotherapy with additional radiotherapy given to eight cases identified as N2. Prophylactic cranial radiotherapy (given in one case) should be considered after complete resection and adjuvant chemotherapy. It is assumed that prophylactic cranial radiotherapy has positive effects on disease-free and general survival.
Very few cases of SCLC have a chance for surgical resection because the pathological stage is always more advanced than the clinical stage. Therefore, preoperative clinical staging should be done very accurately. Surgery should be avoided in patients that clinically exceed stage I (T1-2, N0). For stage I cases, mediastinoscopy or other mediastinal surgical evaluation should be performed first, and surgery should be considered afterwards. Small-cell lung cancer-diagnosed surgical candidates should undergo neoadjuvant chemotherapy, and chemotherapy should be continued after resection. Patients that underwent surgery without any diagnosis and were postoperatively diagnosed with SCLC should undergo chemotherapy after surgery as well as radiotherapy as needed. For those for whom complete resection could not be performed, partial resection does not contribute to survival. In our study, the five-year survival rate was 86% and the average survival duration was 97.9 months for N0 cases, and 15% and 15.8 months for N1 and N2 cases, respectively. Our results support the publications that suggest surgical treatment is needed in early stage SCLC.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
1) Miller AB, Fox W, Tall R. Five-year follow-up of the
Medical Research Council comparative trial of surgery and
radiotherapy for the primary treatment of small-celled or oatcelled
carcinoma of the bronchus. Lancet 1969;2:501-5.
2) Meyer JA, Parker FB Jr. Small cell carcinoma of the lung.
Ann Thorac Surg 1980;30:602-10.
3) Shepherd FA, Ginsberg RJ, Feld R, Evans WK, Johansen E.
Surgical treatment for limited small-cell lung cancer. The
University of Toronto Lung Oncology Group experience.
J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1991;101:385-93.
4) Zatopek NK, Holoye PY, Ellerbroek NA, Hong WK,
Roth JA, Ryan MB, et al. Resectability of small-cell
lung cancer following induction chemotherapy in patients
with limited disease (stage II-IIIb). Am J Clin Oncol
1991;14:427-32.
5) Davis S, Crino L, Tonato M, Darwish S, Pelicci PG,
Grignani F. A prospective analysis of chemotherapy following
surgical resection of clinical stage I-II small-cell lung cancer.
Am J Clin Oncol 1993;16:93-5.
6) Albain KS, Crowley JJ, LeBlanc M, Livingston RB.
Determinants of improved outcome in small-cell lung cancer:
an analysis of the 2,580-patient Southwest Oncology Group
data base. J Clin Oncol 1990;8:1563-74.
7) Shepherd FA, Ginsberg RJ, Evans WK, Feld R, Cooper JD,
Ilves R, et al. Reduction in local recurrence and improved
survival in surgically treated patients with small cell lung
cancer. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1983;86:498-506.
8) Fleck JF, Einhorn LH, Lauer RC, Schultz SM, Miller ME. Is
prophylactic cranial irradiation indicated in small-cell lung
cancer? J Clin Oncol 1990;8:209-14.
9) Shields TW, Higgins GA Jr, Matthews MJ, Keehn R. Surgical
resection in the management of small cell carcinoma of the
lung. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1982;84:481-8.
10) Shepherd FA, Ginsberg RJ, Haddad R, Feld R, Sagman U,
Evans WK, et al. Importance of clinical staging in limited
small-cell lung cancer: a valuable system to separate
prognostic subgroups. The University of Toronto Lung
Oncology Group. J Clin Oncol 1993;11:1592-7.
11) Coolen L, Vanden Eeckhout A, Deneffe G, Demedts M,
Vansteenkiste J. Surgical treatment of small cell lung cancer.
Eur J Cardiothoraci Surg 1995;9:59-64.
12) Rea F, Callegaro D, Favaretto A, Loy M, Paccagnella A,
Fantoni U, Festi G, Sartori F. Long term results of surgery and
chemotherapy in small cell lung cancer. Eur J Cardiothorac
Surg 1998;14:398-402.
13) Inoue M, Miyoshi S, Yasumitsu T, Mori T, Iuchi K,
Maeda H, Matsuda H. Surgical results for small cell lung
cancer based on the new TNM staging system. Ann Thorac
Surg 2000;70:1615-9.
14) Veronesi G, Scanagatta P, Leo F, De Pas T, Pelosi G,
Catalano G, et al. Adjuvant surgery after carboplatin and
VP16 in resectable small cell lung cancer. J Thorac Oncol
2007;2:131-4.
15) Granetzny A, Boseila A, Wagner W, Krukemeyer G, Vogt U,
Hecker E, et al. Surgery in the tri-modality treatment of
small cell lung cancer. Stage-dependent survival. Eur J
Cardiothorac Surg 2006;30:212-6.