How we should tailor the nodal staging for various types of lung cancer?
In 1951, Cahan (1) reported that pneumonectomy with mediastinal nodal dissection could be a curative surgery for primary lung cancer. He then suggested that lobectomy with mediastinal nodal dissection, so called “radical lobectomy” should be a standard surgical treatment in 1960 (2). This technique was accepted worldwide and has been a standard surgical treatment for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). The figures of mediastinal nodal dissection described in his report in 1951 were identical with our current procedure of mediastinal dissection (1). In a next few decades, re-evaluation of nodal status during thoracotomy procedure for NSCLC had evolved into a more meticulous and sophisticated assessment of disease extent. Central to this is an assessment of lymph node metastasis at the both hilum and mediastinum levels. This technique, termed “systematic nodal dissection” (SND) by the IASLC, has been recognized as an important element of surgical staging (3), simply because the microscopic nodal status is considered to be the strongest prognostic factor for NSCLC among many clinicopathological factors. Microscopic evaluation of removed lymph nodes offers the most reliable information as for prognosis of NSCLC patients. Precise identification of lymph node involvement leads us to selection of the patients requiring adjuvant therapy and suggests us the precise prognosis of each patient with NSCLC.
In the article “Predictive risk factors for lymph node metastasis in patients with resected non-small cell lung cancer: a case control study” recently published by Dr. Yusef Moulla et al. (4) in Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery shows how to make precise assessment of the nodal status in NSCLC patients. They analyzed prospectively-established database of 204 consecutive NSCLC patients who underwent thoracotomy. Among them, lymph node involvement was found in 38.2%. Central localization of the primary tumor (OR: 2.6, 95% CI: 1.3–5.1) and size of primary tumor >3 cm (OR: 2.5, 95% CI: 1.3–4.4) were significant predictive factors for lymph node metastasis. Microscopic intratumoral invasion of the lymph vessels (L1-status) (OR: 17.3, 95% CI: 5.1–58.4) and the central localization of the primary tumor (OR: 2.8, 95% CI: 1.4–5.8) were significant predictive factors for nodal metastasis. Two significant predictive factors for nodal involvement were identified in small-sized tumors ≤3 cm: central localization of primary tumor (OR: 19.4, 95% CI: 2.1–186.4) and L1-status (OR: 43.9, 95% CI: 3.6–529.4). They suggested that precise assessment of the lymph node status before and during thoracotomy is essential for larger-sized (>3 cm) and centrally located tumors. Moreover, microscopic L1-status is the most significant risk factor for nodal involvement in NSCLC patients. They also suggested that adjuvant chemotherapy might be considered after pulmonary resection based on microscopic L1-status regardless of nodal involvement.
The authors are to be congratulated on their successful results. Surgeons have recognized that the nodal status during thoracotomy is not always as diagnosed by preoperative assessment. Meta-analyses have shown that the sensitivity and specificity for CT in nodal status are ranged 52% to 79% and 69% to 78%, respectively (5,6). Positron emission tomography (PET) has considered to be more accurate investigation as for nodal status, however, the sensitivity and specificity are ranged just 79% to 85% and 90% to 91%, respectively (7). Therefore the preoperative nodal evaluation by CT or PET is not reliable enough, especially in patients with microscopic nodal involvement. Actually, 60% of cN1 patients diagnosed by CT was microscopically changed to be N2 disease after SND in adenocarcinoma patients (8). Even in small-sized (≤2 cm) NSCLC patients, more than 20% of patients show nodal metastasis (9,10). This is why SND is recognized to be an essential component of pathological staging.
Recently, however, the incidence of small-sized NSCLC is increasing dramatically, therefore the strategy of mediastinal dissection for NSCLC has changed. The lobe-specific pathways of nodal metastasis have retrospectively analyzed and reported by many thoracic surgeons. Asamura et al. (11) and Okada et al. (12) suggested that the tumors located within right upper lobe and left upper division segment often involve the superior mediastinal nodes, but rarely involve the subcarinal nodes. Okada et al. reported that the tumor within lower lobe seldom involve the superior mediastinal nodes without involve the hilar or subcarinal lymph nodes. Based on the results of lobe-specific patterns of nodal metastatic pathway, the preoperative assessment of the N status and strategy of mediastinal dissection have been changing in c-stage I, II lung cancer. Since the incidence of detecting early NSCLC is increasing, the intraoperative extent of mediastinal dissection should be tailored by the location and size of primary tumor, histological type, and consolidation/tumor ratio (C/T ratio) on thin-slice CT in each tumor. The tailored extent of nodal dissection was termed “lobe-specific SND” by ESTS guidelines (13). In the “lobe-specific SND”, the “key nodes,” which should be microscopically checked during thoracotomy by the frozen section examination, was found in each lobe (14).
However, regarding the tumor other than GGO lesion or small-sized lung cancer, we must take care not to underestimate the nodal status pre- or intra-operatively. Wang et al. (15) reported that the negative predictive value for mediastinal involvement by using both PET and CT was 0.94 in T1 tumors and 0.89 in T2 tumors. Lee et al. (16) reported that the centrally-located tumors had a significantly higher incidence of microscopic mediastinal involvement compared to peripherally-located tumors, 21.6 vs. 2.9% in clinical stage I patients evaluated by both PET and CT. Abovementioned paper described by Dr. Moulla (4) suggested the hint of selecting the candidate of preoperative meticulous staging using endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) or postoperative pathological staging by SND, especially for larger-sized (>3 cm) tumors, central located tumors and pathologic L-1 status.
Acknowledgments
Funding: None.
Footnote
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