PS51. Anatomic Lung Resection is Associated with a Better Prognosis Compared with Wedge Resection for Small Stage IA Adenocarcinoma with Predominantly Non-lepidic Histology

Jane Zhao Poster Presenter
University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Medicine
Memphis, TN 
United States
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Jane Zhao is a cardiothoracic surgery fellow at The Ohio State University. 

Saturday, May 6, 2023: 8:00 AM - Tuesday, May 9, 2023: 11:45 AM
Los Angeles Convention Center 
Room: Outside of Room 408 

Description

Objective: Sublobar resection is oncologically effective for small peripheral Ia non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but the role of non-anatomic wedge resection for tumors with high-risk histologic features remains controversial. This study compares the long-term prognosis of patients with non-lepidic variants of adenocarcinoma treated with anatomic vs. non-anatomic lung resection for small (<2cm) pathologically node negative tumors.
Methods: The National Cancer Database (2004-2017) was queried for patients with invasive mucinous (MA), predominantly papillary (PA) and solid type (SA) lung adenocarcinoma who were staged pT1N0 after surgery and with tumor size <2 cm on surgical pathology. Overall survival was compared between non-anatomic (wedge) versus anatomic resection (segmentectomy/lobectomy) using inverse probability of treatment weight (IPTW) adjusted Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses.
Results: A total of 2,766 patients (64.2% MA, 29.0% PA, 6.7% SA) were analyzed, accounting for 5.7% of all patients with invasive stage IA1-2 adenocarcinoma who underwent surgery in the study period. The comparison groups comprised of 2,138 (77.3%) patients who underwent anatomic lobectomy or segmentectomy and 628 (22.7%) patients treated with wedge resection. Demographics and clinical characteristics were well balanced after IPTW. The complete R0 resection rate was similarly high (anatomic 99.3% vs. wedge 98.2%; p=0.12), but anatomic resection was associated with a higher number of lymph nodes removed (>10 nodes, 38.1% vs. 13.1%; p<0.001). Ninety-day mortality was 1.9% in both groups. IPTW adjusted survival was significantly longer after anatomic resection for MA (5-year OS, 85.4% vs. 75.2%; p=0.010) and PA adenocarcinoma patients (5-year OS, 81.3% vs. 72.3%, p=0.018), but not for the SA type (Figure). On multivariable analysis, adjusting for IPTW, demographics, comorbidities, margin status and number of lymph nodes removed, anatomic resection remained independently associated with improved survival for patients with MA (HR 0.76 (95% CI:0.59-0.98; p=0.034) or PA (HR 0.62 (95% CI: 0.42-0.89; p=0.009).

Conclusions: Invasive mucinous and predominantly papillary adenocarcinoma represent a small portion of small stage I lung adenocarcinoma patients. Anatomic resection is associated with better lymph node harvest and improved long-term survival compared with wedge resection for these adenocarcinoma histologic types.

Presentation Duration

There is no formal oral presentation associated with this electronic poster. Your poster will be available for viewing the poster kiosk located outside of the specialty room as well as in the Exhibit Hall, for the duration of the meeting. 

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