Methods: Between January 2010 and December 2018, a total of 144 patients (125 males, 19 females; median age 60 years; range, 41 to 80 years) who were operated for non-small cell lung cancer in our clinic and whose pathological stage was reported as IIIA were retrospectively analyzed. Data including demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients, histopathological diagnosis, the standardized uptake value of the mass on positron emission tomography-computed tomography, tumor diameter, type of surgery, lymph node metastasis status, visceral pleural invasion, and overall and disease-free survival rates were recorded.
Results: The median survival was 39 (range, 27.8 to 46.1) months and the five-year overall survival rate was 28%. The mean tumor diameter was 4.3±2.7 cm. The median disease-free survival was 37 (range, 28.1 to 48.6) months and the five-year disease-free survival rate was 26.9%. In the multivariate analysis, overall survival and disease-free survival in T2N2M0 subgroup were significantly worse than the other subgroups. The other poor prognostic factors of survival were the standardized uptake value of the tumor, pneumonectomy, and histopathological subtypes other than squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma. Parietal pleural invasion was significantly associated with worse disease-free survival rates.
Conclusion: Our results showed that there may be significant survival differences between subgroups created by tumor histopathology, lymph node invasion and the type of surgery in a heterogeneous lung cancer stage.
In the present study, we aimed to identify the prognostic factors in occult Stage IIIA NSCLC and to investigate whether there was a significant difference in terms of overall survival (OS) and disease-free survival (DFS) among the subgroups belonging to this disease stage.
Figure 1: A CONSORT diagram of patient selection.
MLND: Mediastinal lymph node dissection.
Data including demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients and operative data (i.e. age, sex, tumor histopathology, tumor diameter, type of surgery, lymph node invasion status, presence of visceral pleural invasion, number and location of metastatic N2 station, SUV on PET-CT and Stage IIIA subgroups [T1N2M0, T2N2M0, T3N1M0, T4N0M0, and T4N1M0]) were recorded. A written informed consent was obtained from each patient. The study protocol was approved by the Medicine Faculty of Gazi University Ethics Committee (Number: 2019-259). The study was conducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki.
The OS was defined as the length of time from surgery to death or the final follow-up. The DFS was defined as the time from surgery to local recurrence/ distant metastasis or follow-up period. The skip lymph node metastasis was defined as lymph node metastasis directly at N2 stations without metastasis at N1 stations. Each subgroup was compared with each other and the group with the worst OS and DFS rates was compared with all Stage IIIA subgroups.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using the IBM
SPSS version 20.0 software (IBM Corp., Armonk,
NY, USA). Descriptive data were expressed in mean ±
standard deviation (SD), median (min-max) or number
and frequency. Chi Square test was used for categorical
variables and log rank test was used for continuous
variables. The OS was analyzed using the Kaplan-
Meier method with 95% confidence interval (CI).
Survival differences between the groups were analyzed
using the log-rank test or Cox regression analysis.
Survival analyses according to SUV of the mass,
surgical technique (i.e., lobectomy, pneumonectomy),
histopathology, subgroups of Stage IIIA based on
multivariate Cox analysis and all analyses were
performed in 95% CI. A two-sided p value of <0.05
was considered statistically significant.
Table 1: Clinicopathological characteristics of patients (n=144)
Table 2: Survival analyses and p values of patients according to various prognostic factors
The median survival was 39 (range, 27.8 to 46.1) months and the five-year OS rate was 28% (Figure 2). There was no significant difference between the groups in terms of (younger or older than 70 years). According to the TNM subgroups, the best median survival was detected in T3N1M0 subgroup as 48 months and the worst survival was found in T2N2M0 subgroup as 30 months. The five-year OS of T2N2M0 subgroup was 19.9%, indicating a significantly worse OS than all other subgroups (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.56; 95% CI: 1.1-2.6, p=0.04) (Figure 3). Throughout the study period, there were 29 patients with NSCLC in Stage IIIB operated in our department, and the median survival of these patients was 23 (range, 18.2 to 35.7) months and the five-year OS was 21.2%. The survival of T2N2M0 subgroup was similar to that of Stage IIIB.
Figure 2: Kaplan-Meier plot of overall survival.
Figure 3: Comparison of T2N2M0 subgroup with other subgroups in terms of overall survival.
Histopathologically, the median survival was found as 36 (range, 29.3 to 42.6) months in the AC group, 53 (range, 34 to 66.5) months in the SCC group, and 17 (range, 4.8 to 28.1) months in the other histopathological group, indicating a statistically significant difference (HR: 2.30; 95% CI: 1.1-4.6, p=0.01) (Figure 4).
The patients were classified according to the SUV on PET-CT, as ≤3, 3 to 9, and >9 and 9 was considered the median uptake value of the study. The median survival was found to be 78 (range, 67.7 to 89.7) months in patients with a SUV of ≤3 and it was found to be significantly higher, compared to other groups (47 months in patients with SUV: 3-9 and 32 months in SUV >9 group; HR: 0.18; 95% CI: 0.06-0.53, p=0.01) (Figure 5). We also analyzed the T2N2M0 subgroup within itself using the PET-SUV value (HR: 0.9, 95% CI, p=0.80), pneumonectomy (HR: 0.5, 95% CI, p=0.13), and histopathological type (HR: 0.7, 95% CI, p=0.58) (Table 3).
In patients with right-sided N2 station metastasis, the best survival was detected in the 2R stationpositive group as 39 months and the worst survival was found in multiple N2-positive group as 30 months, although no statistically significant correlation was found (p=0.69). Similarly, there was no significant difference in the survival rates of the patients who had left-side N2 station metastasis based on the number and location of lymph nodes. In the analysis performed according to pleural invasion, the best median survival was found to be 41 (range, 31.6 to 50.3) months in the non-pleural invasion group and the worst survival was found in the parietal pleural invasion group to be 24 (range, 7.0 to 40.9) months, indicating no statistically significant correlation. Tumors with N2 station positivity were classified according to the T status as T1 and T2, and the median survival was 45.5 (range, 33.6 to 57.5) months in the T1 group and 26.3 (range, 18.3 to 34.7) months in the T2 group, indicating a statistically significant difference ( HR: 2.1; 95% CI: 1.1-3.9, p =0.03). In addition, T4 tumors were grouped as 7-≤8 cm, 8-≤9 cm and 9-≤10 cm, and >10 cm according to their diameter, and the best median survival was detected in the first group as 45 (range, 16.5 to 73) months and the worst survival was found to be 31 (range, 13.5 to 48.1) months in those whose tumor diameter greater than 10 cm, although there was no statistically significant difference (p=0.09).
The median DFS was found to be 37 (range, 28.1 to 48.6) months and the five-year DFS rate was 26.9% for all Stage IIIA patients. Histopathologically, the best DFS was found to be 50.4 (range, 40 to 60.8) months in the SCC group and the worst to be 36.2 (range, 22.7 to 50.6) months in the other histopathological groups; however, it did not statistical significance (p=0.64). The median DFS was found to be better in the pneumonectomy group than the others, although this result was not statistically significant, either. The median DFS was 37 months in the patients with visceral pleural invasion, 40 months in those without pleural invasion, and it was found to be statistically significant worse in patients with parietal pleural invasion (p=0.03).
There was a significant correlation between the DFS and SUV on PET-CT (p=0.02). When the T2N2M0 group and the others were compared, the median DFS was 26 (range, 18.3 to 34.4) months and 46 (range, 37.7 to 53.7) months, respectively, indicating a statistically significant difference (HR: 1.7; 95% CI: 1.0-3.11, p=0.04) (Figure 6). On the other hand, there was no significant difference in DFS rates in single or multiple lymph node station metastases in patients who had a positive N2 station. Skip lymph node metastasis was detected in seven patients in our study. The median survival in N2 patients with skip metastasis was 31 (range, 11.6 to 49.9) months, whereas it was 42 (range, 34.7 to 50.8) months in the patients with N1 and N2 lymph node metastases. However, there was no statistically significant correlation (p=0.33).
Figure 6: Comparison of T2N2M0 subgroup with other subgroups in terms of disease-free survival.
There are conflicting studies about the relationship between lung cancer surgery and age in the literature. It has been thought that elastic recoil and pulmonary reserve decreases, comorbidities and surgical mortality increases with aging.[8] However, Aytekin et al.[9] reported that there was no significant difference in the 30-day mortality and five-year survival OS between the groups younger and older than 70 years of age. Dell'Amore et al.,[10] demonstrated satisfactory results in terms of mortality, morbidity, and longterm survival with a careful preoperative evaluation in patients older than 75 years. In contrast, Mery et al.[11] reported that the prognosis of patients older than 65 years was worse than younger with lower median and five-year OS rates. In our study, the median survival was 29 (range, 17.8 to 39.2) months in the patients aged ≥70 years and 43 (range, 36.6 to 49-6) months in the patients younger than 70 years, although we found no significant correlation between the survival rates and age (p=0.12). This result indicates that medical performance status, such as physiological status, respiratory and cardiac capacity, and comorbidities of the patients should be considered rather than the age of patients while planning surgery for lung cancer.
Many authors have proposed that pneumonectomy is a disease in itself and it is an important negative prognostic factor for survival.[12-14] Consistent with the literature, in our study, the median survival of pneumonectomy group was statistically significantly worse than the other surgical types. The relationship between the SUV on PET-CT and survival has been described in many studies in the literature. Okereke et al.[15] reported that SUV was a determinant in both T/N factor and prognosis. Kieninger et al.[16] also suggested that SUV was associated with prognostic indicators such as stage and grade in lung cancer; however, it did not have a prognostic significance by itself. Cistaro et al.[17] found a significant relationship between SUV and DFS in patients with early-stage lung cancer. In our study, the patients were divided into three groups according to the SUV of the primary lesion using PET-CT. The first group had a SUV of ≤3 (hypermetabolic cut-off value), the second group had a SUV of 3-9 (9 was median uptake value of our study), and the third group had a SUV of ≥9. We found a statistically significant difference in the survival rates among these groups. Furthermore, the tumor diameter and lymph node invasion are the factors associated with the tumor stage and these have been reported as poor prognostic factors in a previous study.[18] In our study, the tumor size was a significant prognostic factor for survival consistent with the literature. In order to create homogeneous groups, the classification was made according to the tumor diameter in the same subgroups. When T3 tumors were grouped as 5-6 cm and 6-7 cm according to their diameter, we found a statistically significant correlation between the tumor diameter and OS.
In the literature, there are controversial results regarding DFS in Stage IIIA NSCLC patients. Endo et al.[19] reported a five-year DFS of 25% in Stage IIIA NSCLC patients and significant prognostic factors were visceral pleural invasion and tumor diameter. Choi et al.[20] found the five-year DFS to be 39.6 in these patients and significant prognostic factors for DFS were complete resectability and induction therapy. Tseden-Ish et al.[21] also reported a median survival of 25.1 months in Stage IIIA patients. Similarly, Cerfolio and Bryant[22] found that poor tumor differentiation, multiple N1 station positivity, and lack of adjuvant therapy were the main poor prognostic factors for DFS in Stage IIIA NSCLC patients. In our study, the median DFS was found 37 (range, 21.5 to 58.4) months and five-year DFS rate was 26.9%. Significantly poor prognostic factors for DFS included parietal pleural invasion, high SUV on PET-CT, and T2N2M0 subgroup. The median DFS was found to be 37 months in the presence of visceral pleural invasion, 40 months in those without pleural invasion, and 10 months in patients with parietal pleural invasion (p=0.03). The median DFS was 70.4 (range, 55.2 to 85.5) months and 39.8 (range, 30.2 to 49.5) months in the group with SUV <3 and SUV> 9 on PET-CT, respectively (p=0.02). In addition, it was 37 (range, 22.9 to 51) months in the T1N2M0 group and 26 (range, 18.3 to 34.4) months in the T2N2 group (p=0.03). Although not statistically significant, other factors which affected DFS were other histopathologies and surgery except than pneumonectomy. In our study, the occult N2 ratio was higher than the literature. In N2 staging, we applied the European Society of Thoracic Surgeon (ESTS) guidelines. Our pN2 ratio was found to be higher, particularly in patients with AC, and a peripheral, small diameter mass without mediastinal involvement on PET-CT. Meanwhile, 749 patients were operated (i.e., lung anatomic resection and systematic lymph node dissection) with the primary NSCLC diagnosis without receiving neoadjuvant therapy. The occult N2 ratio of our study was found to be 13.4%.
The main limitations of this study are its singlecenter and retrospective design with a small sample size. In addition, invasive mediastinal staging was unable to be performed in all cases (i.e., peripheral tumor location, tumors with small diameter, the small mediastinal lymph nodes on thoracic CT and no mediastinal involvement on PET-CT).
In conclusion, according to the eighth tumor, node, metastasis, Stage IIIA non-small cell lung cancers are highly heterogenous malignancies. In our study, T2N2M0 group had a significantly worse prognosis compared to other groups in terms of overall survival and disease-free survival. Other significant poor prognostic factors for overall survival and disease-free survival included the tumor diameter, high standard uptake value value on positron emission tomographycomputed tomography, other histopathological subtypes (i.e., pleomorphic carcinoma, large cell carcinoma, and adeno-squamous cell carcinoma) and parietal pleural invasion. Nonetheless, further multi-center, large-scale, long-term, prospective studies including T2N2M0 patients are required to obtain a more accurate conclusion.
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.
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