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Presence of a Ground-Glass Opacity Component Is the True Prognostic Determinant in Clinical Stage I NSCLC

Authors :
Akira Hamada, MD
Kenichi Suda, MD, PhD
Toshio Fujino, MD, PhD
Masaya Nishino, MD, PhD
Shuta Ohara, MD, PhD
Takamasa Koga, MD, PhD
Takanobu Kabasawa, MD, PhD
Masato Chiba, MD, PhD
Masaki Shimoji, MD, PhD
Makoto Endoh, MD, PhD
Toshiki Takemoto, MD, PhD
Junichi Soh, MD, PhD
Naoki Yanagawa, MD, PhD
Satoshi Shiono, MD, PhD
Tetsuya Mitsudomi, MD, PhD
Source :
JTO Clinical and Research Reports, Vol 3, Iss 5, Pp 100321- (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction: Recent studies have suggested that including presence or absence of ground-glass opacity (GGO) may improve the tumor descriptor (T descriptor) classification in clinical stage I NSCLC. In this study, we analyzed prognostic implications of presence or absence of GGO, size of the solid component, and predominant histology to identify the true prognostic determinant for early-stage NSCLC. Methods: We retrospectively examined 384 patients with clinical stage I NSCLC (solid: 242, part solid: 142) who underwent complete resection between 2009 and 2013. Results: Survival curves of the whole cohort revealed good separation using the current TNM classification. Nevertheless, the part-solid group had a favorable prognosis irrespective of solid component size. Conversely, patients in the solid tumor group with tumors between 3 and 4 cm had a worse prognosis than patients whose tumors were less than or equal to 3 cm. Thus, we propose the following novel T descriptor classification: IA, part-solid tumors; IB, solid tumors less than or equal to 3 cm; and IC, solid tumors between 3 and 4 cm. This novel classification system stratified patient prognosis better than the current classification. On pathologic evaluation, the part-solid group always had better prognoses than the solid group in each subgroup divided by pathologic grade. Conclusions: These results suggest that presence of GGO is the true prognostic determinant of stage I NSCLC, irrespective of the size of the solid component. Our novel T descriptor classification system could more accurately predict prognoses of clinical stage I NSCLC cases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26663643
Volume :
3
Issue :
5
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JTO Clinical and Research Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.3038b81b06d4260b05a610326300a03
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtocrr.2022.100321