Objective: Sublobar resection is practically indicated in poor-risk patients compromised cardiopulmonary reserve or for small ground-glass opacity-dominant adenocarcinomas. The aim of this study was to clarify the surgical outcomes of wide wedge resection in poor-risk patients with clinical-N0 non-small cell lung cancers.
Methods: Sixty-two poor-risk patients, who underwent wedge resection for clinical-N0 lung cancer, were retrospectively reviewed. We defined the ratio of the maximum diameter of the consolidation to the maximum tumour diameter as the consolidation-to-tumour ratio using high-resolution computed tomography.
Results: The 5-year overall, recurrence-free, and lung cancer specific survivals of all patients were 56.4, 46.6, and 81.1%, respectively, while other malignancies were frequently found as causes of death. Overall and recurrence-free survivals were favourable in patients with tumour size ≤3 cm, consolidation-to-tumour ratio ≤0.50, solid tumour size ≤1.2 cm, carcinoembryonic antigen level <5.0 ng/mL and adenocarcinoma. Multivariate Cox proportional hazard model revealed that solid tumour size ≤1.2 cm and consolidation-to-tumour ratio ≤0.50 were independent prognostic factors. CT-guided lipiodol marking was applied in 20 patients to identify the tumour location had no recurrence.
Conclusions: Wide wedge resection could be radical treatment option in poor-risk patients with clinical-N0 non-small cell lung cancer, though careful follow-up might be necessary for other malignancies. Patients with solid tumour ≤1.2 cm or ground-glass-dominant lesion are good candidates for wedge resection. CT-guided lipiodol marking is a useful option to identify the location and safe surgical tumour margin in wedge resection.
Keywords: Consolidation-to-tumour ratio; Lipiodol marking; Non-small cell lung cancer; Poor-risk patients; Solid tumour size; Wide wedge resection.