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[Impact of induction therapies on pathology and outcome after surgical resection of non-small lung cancer: a 30-year experience of 859 patients].

Authors :
Mordant P
Fabre É
Gibault L
Arame A
Pricopi C
Dujon A
Le Pimpec-Barthes F
Riquet M
Source :
Revue de pneumologie clinique [Rev Pneumol Clin] 2014 Feb-Apr; Vol. 70 (1-2), pp. 9-15. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Feb 22.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Unlabelled: The management of localized non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has been modified over the last decades, with induction therapies being increasingly recommended as a prerequisite to surgical resection. However, the relative impact of chemo- and chemoradiotherapy on tumours' pathology and patients' survival is still discussed.<br />Methods: We set a retrospective study including every patient who underwent surgical resection for NSCLC in 2 French centres from 1980 to 2009. We then compared the tumours' pathology and patients' survival according to the use of induction chemotherapy (group 1) or induction chemoradiotherapy (group 2).<br />Results: There were 733 patients in group 1 and 126 patients in group 2. In group 1, 669 patients (91%) had platinum-based chemotherapy, for 2 to 3 cycles in 564 cases (77%). In group 2, chemoradiotheray was concomitant in 68 patients (54%), and sequential in 58 patients (46%). As compared with group 1, group 2 was characterized by younger age (mean 59.8±9.5 vs 56.4±9.6, respectively, P<.001), a higher rate of tumours deemed unresectable before induction treatment (25% vs 44%, P<.001), and a higher proportion of T4 (25% vs 44%, P<.001) or N2 diseases (56% vs 69%, P=.005). The type of resection, postoperative complications, and postoperative mortality were not significantly different between groups. On final pathologic report, as compared with group 1, there were more N0 and N1 disease in group 2 (N0: 43% vs 58%, P=.002; N1: 22% vs 10%, P=.002) while the rate of N2 disease was comparable (34% vs 32%, P=ns). The median, 5-, and 10-year survivals were 28 months, 35%, and 21% for group 1, and 29 months, 36%, and 23% for group 2, respectively (P=ns).<br />Conclusion: As compared with induction chemotherapy, induction chemoradiotherapy was performed in more advanced NSCLC, and resulted in better downstaging, similar postoperative course, and comparable long-term outcome after surgical resection.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
French
ISSN :
1776-2561
Volume :
70
Issue :
1-2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Revue de pneumologie clinique
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24566030
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pneumo.2013.12.008