Differential outcomes of residual disease in surgically-resected non-small cell lung cancer and the importance of guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy
Original Article

Differential outcomes of residual disease in surgically-resected non-small cell lung cancer and the importance of guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy

Dustin K. Lieu1, Li Ding2, Elizabeth A. David3, Sean C. Wightman3, Scott M. Atay3, P. Michael McFadden3, Anthony W. Kim3

1Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 2Division of Biostatistics, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 3Division of Thoracic Surgery, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA

Contributions: (I) Conception and design: DK Lieu, L Ding, AW Kim; (II) Administrative support: AW Kim; (III) Provision of study materials or patients: EA David, L Ding, AW Kim; (IV) Collection and assembly of data: DK Lieu, L Ding; (V) Data analysis and interpretation: All authors; (VI) Manuscript writing: All authors; (VII) Final approval of manuscript: All authors.

Correspondence to: Anthony W. Kim, MD. Division of Thoracic Surgery, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA. Email: anthony.kim@med.usc.edu.

Background: Positive mediastinal lymph nodes, a marker for systemic disease, and positive margins, a marker for local disease, following resection of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are forms of residual disease. The objective of this study is to compare survival of patients with residual disease and to study the effect of receipt of guideline vs. non-guideline concordant care.

Methods: The National Cancer Database (NCDB) was used to identify patients who underwent treatment naïve surgical resection with clinical stage T1-3N0-1M0 NSCLC between 2006–2016 and had pN2 disease, positive surgical margins, or both. Concordant care was determined based on form of chemotherapy and radiation, dosage, volume, modality, and duration. Kaplan-Meier survival curves and log-rank tests were used to compare five-year survival. Multivariable analysis using Cox proportional hazards modeling identified factors that contributed to worse overall survival.

Results: There were 8,189 patients included: pN2 (5,416), positive margins (2,386), and both (387). Five-year survival rates for all patients were pN2 (35.8%), positive margins (33.9%), and both (22.9%) (P<0.0001). On multivariable analysis, positive margins were an independent predictor of better survival relative to pN2 disease (HR =0.729, CI: 0.676, 0.787, P<0.0001). Receipt of non-guideline concordant treatment was an independent predictor of worse survival compared to receipt of guideline-concordant treatment (HR =1.61, CI: 1.504, 1.725, P<0.0001).

Conclusions: In upfront surgical patients, guideline-concordant treatment in the setting of residual disease is associated with better overall survival compared with non-guideline concordant treatment. Pathologic N2 disease is associated with a lower survival rate than positive resection margins, possibly reflecting the systemic nature of pN2 disease.

Keywords: Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC); chemotherapy; radiotherapy; margins of excision; surgery


Submitted Jan 18, 2021. Accepted for publication Apr 02, 2021.

doi: 10.21037/jtd-21-110


Introduction

Lung cancer is the second most common cause of cancer in both men and women, and the most common cause of cancer-related mortality nationwide, comprising almost 25% of all-cancer related deaths (1). Curative intent resection of primary lung tumors is indicated for patients with clinical stage I and II non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), as well as for patients with Stage IIIA NSCLC with preoperatively diagnosed discrete N2 involvement (2). Surgery in the setting of primary lung cancer is performed with the goal of curative resection for early stage disease, while surgery for locoregionally advanced disease is usually reserved as one modality of a multimodality treatment paradigm (2). Intraoperatively, however, a surgeon may be faced with two forms of residual disease during resection—positive residual margins, and occult pathological N2 disease.

Positive surgical margins are subclassified into R1 resections (microscopic residual tumor) and R2 resections (macroscopic residual tumor). Previous studies have reported an incidence ranging from 4–6% (3-6). Clinical guidelines for both R1 and R2 resections recommend either re-resection of the tumor or adjuvant radiotherapy; some guidelines such as those from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) recommend addition of chemotherapy for more advanced stage malignancies (2,7,8).

Known preoperative N2 disease may be treated with or without surgery; NCCN guidelines for noninvasive T1-3N2M0 disease recommend either definitive concurrent chemoradiation followed by durvalumab or induction chemotherapy with or without radiation followed by surgery if no progression is seen (7). Clinical guidelines recommend neoadjuvant chemotherapy or chemoradiation prior to surgery if an attempt to resect is considered (9). The dilemma arises when occult pN2 is discovered intraoperatively, as patients with clinically staged N0-N1 disease are unlikely to have received neoadjuvant therapy. In these cases, however, completion of the planned resection is still recommended; some studies of the efficacy of adjuvant therapy after resection for occult pN2 disease have found survival rates comparable to those with known cN2 disease receiving neoadjuvant therapy (7,9,10).

The hypothesis of this study is that patients with residual disease that receive non-guideline concordant adjuvant therapy would experience lower survivals than patients that receive guideline-concordant care. Furthermore, it is hypothesized that patients with pN2 disease, reflecting a systemic burden of disease, would experience lower survivals than patients with positive margins, which reflect local extension of disease. In this study, the survivals of patients with these two forms of postoperative residual disease—positive surgical margins and occult pN2 disease—were compared.

We present the following article in accordance with the STROBE reporting checklist (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/jtd-21-110).


Methods

Data source

The National Cancer Database (NCDB) is a hospital-based clinical oncology tumor registry maintained as a joint effort of the American College of Surgeons (ACS) and the American Cancer Society. The NCDB contains more than 34 million records of patients with cancer obtained from more than 1500 Commission of Cancer (CoC) accredited facilities, representing approximately 70% of patients diagnosed annually with cancer.

Study population

The NCDB Participant User Data File was queried for patients 18 years or older who were diagnosed with NSCLC from 2006 to 2016 and had received no preoperative radiation therapy or chemotherapy. Patients were evaluated if they underwent curative intent surgical resection of clinical stage T1-3N0-1M0 NSCLC and were found to have positive margins, occult pathologic N2 disease (pN2), or both. Patients with clinical T descriptors of 0 or 4, unknown clinical T or N descriptors, or metastatic disease (M1) were excluded. T4 tumors were excluded as they are frequently “bulky” and/or have extensive mediastinal involvement that requires upfront neoadjuvant chemotherapy or chemoradiation. Patients with pathologic T descriptors of IS or X were also excluded (Figure 1). The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki (as revised in 2013).

Figure 1 Consort Diagram showing cohort selection process. The final cohort contained 8,189 patients, who were categorized into three separate cohorts depending on the form of residual disease-occult pN2 disease, positive margins, or both.

Variables and outcomes

Demographic variables included sex, race, age, income, education, insurance, facility type, distance from nearest treatment facility, and type of residence. Clinical and tumor specific variables included Charlson-Deyo score, histology, tumor size (≤3, 3–5, 5–7, and >7 cm), year of diagnosis and receipt of guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy (Table 1). Histology was subdivided into adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and other. Age was categorized by quartiles based on median and interquartile range. The tumor size cutoffs were chosen because they represent the tumor size cutoffs for NSCLC staging according to the TNM system. The extent of surgical resection was also identified and recorded—procedures were stratified into lobectomies, extended lobectomies (resection of a single lobe plus a segment of another lobe), and pneumonectomies. Sublobar resections were excluded as they were felt to be inadequate for larger tumors.

Table 1
Table 1 Criteria for categorization of guideline-concordant treatment
Full table

Patients were grouped based upon form of residual disease—occult pN2 disease, positive margins, or both. Type of positive margin was subdivided into R1 vs. R2 disease for supplemental analysis but was not subdivided in the primary multivariable analysis. Patients were categorized as having received guideline-concordant or non-guideline concordant care based on criteria listed in Table 1. Patients with residual disease were included in their respective cohorts regardless of whether or not they received guideline-concordant or non-guideline concordant treatment in order to fully capture the totality of the patient population with remaining residual disease after surgical resection. The primary outcome of interest was five-year overall survival, defined as the interval from the date of surgery to the date of last contact or last vital status. 30 and 90-day mortalities were not analyzed in order to avoid immortal time bias.

Statistical analysis

Descriptive analysis was used to report frequencies and percentages for all categorical variables for each of the three cohorts. Demographic and clinical characteristics of the three groups were compared using Chi-Square and Fisher’s exact test when appropriate. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to generate five-year survival curves; strata were compared using the log-rank test. Propensity match analysis was not performed due to violations of the propensity score match assumption. To analyze the independent effect of type of occult residual disease on survival, a multivariable Cox regression model was generated to estimate hazard ratios for the aforementioned variables. Patients with missing covariate information, follow-up time, or living status were excluded for multivariable analysis. All variables were considered initially for the multivariable model, and variables with P>0.05 not acting as confounders, with >10% change in hazard ratio of residual disease were excluded from the final multivariable analysis; form of residual disease was forced into the final model as this was the primary variable of interest. Post hoc analysis testing interaction between form of residual disease and treatment concordance was significant and remained in the model. Landmark analysis of 30- and 90-day mortality post-surgery were tested separately as sensitivity analysis to account for potential immortal time bias. Results were similar to main results. For simplicity, only the main results were reported. Schoenfeld residuals were used to test proportional hazard assumption for Cox models. Statistical significance was set at two-sided P<0.05. Statistical analysis and graphics were performed and generated using SAS 9.4 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).


Results

A total of 8,189 patients fit the inclusion criteria (Figure 1). 66% (5,416) of these patients had occult pN2 disease, of which 66.4% (3,597) received guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy. 29% (2,386) had positive surgical margins postoperatively, of which 18.9% (451) received guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy. 5% (387) had both positive surgical margins and occult pN2 disease, of which 20.4% (79) received guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy (Table 2).

Table 2
Table 2 Demographics and clinical characteristics of NCDB patients
Full table

Patients who had occult pN2 disease had a mean age of 67 years (SD 9.6 years), were more likely to be female (53.7%), had a higher proportion of smaller tumor sizes (49.3% with size <3 cm), were more likely to have received a lobectomy (89.1%), and had the highest proportion of Charlson-Deyo score =0 (52.3%). Patients who had positive margins had a mean age of 68 years (SD 9.5 years), were more likely to be male (56.2%), were more likely to be white (88.9%) and were least likely to have Charlson-Deyo score =0 (47.2%). Patients with both occult pN2 disease and positive margins had a mean age of 69 years (SD 10.2 years), were more likely to be non-white (13.95%), were most likely to have received a pneumonectomy (15.76%) and were most likely to have larger tumor sizes (14.73% with size >7 cm). A full breakdown of cohort characteristics can be found in Table 2. Patients with pN2 disease receiving adjuvant therapy had a median treatment start date 59 days after surgery (IQR: 42–126 days). Patients with positive margins receiving adjuvant therapy had a median treatment start date 56 days after surgery (IQR: 42–82 days). Patients with both pN2 and positive margins receiving adjuvant therapy had a median treatment start date 52 days after surgery (IQR: 40–95 days). Patients who received both chemotherapy and radiation had a median onset of the latter of the two therapies by day 45 after surgery (IQR: 35–57 days).

The highest observed five-year survival among all patients with residual disease, regardless of receipt of guideline-concordant care, was the occult pN2 group (35.8%), followed by the positive margin group (33.9%). Patients with both occult pN2 disease and positive margins had the lowest overall survival (22.9%) (Figure 2A). Among patients receiving guideline-concordant care (P=0.07), five-year survival was highest in the occult pN2 group (42.2%), followed by the positive margin group (36.9%), with the lowest overall survival rate being observed in patients with both forms of residual disease (31.6%) (Figure 2B). Among patients receiving non-guideline concordant care (P<0.0001), five-year survival was highest in the positive margin group (33.3%), followed by the occult pN2 group (23.5%), with the lowest overall survival rate being observed in patients with both forms of residual disease (20.7%) (Figure 2C). No significant difference in overall survival was seen between patients with R1 positive margins and R2 positive margins (32.6% vs. 27.4%, P=0.27) (Data not shown). Among patients with positive margins, nodal status was associated with overall survival within the overall patient group (pN0 OS 38.0%, pN1 OS 26.6%, pN2 OS 22.9%, P<0.0001) as well as the non-guideline concordant group (pN0 OS 37.9%, pN1 OS 25.2%, pN2 OS 20.7%, P<0.0001), but was not associated with overall survival within the guideline-concordant group (pN0 OS 39.3%, pN1 OS 32.1%, pN2 OS 31.6%, P<0.52) (Figure 3).

Figure 2 Kaplan-Meier analysis of overall survival by form of residual disease. (A) Overall survival of all patients, regardless of receipt of concordant or non-guideline concordant care. Patients with occult pN2 disease only have the highest overall survival (35.8%), followed by patients with positive margins only (33.9%). Patients with both positive margins and occult pN2 disease have the lowest overall survival (22.9%) (P<0.0001). (B) Overall survival of patients receiving guideline-concordant care. Patients with occult pN2 disease only have the highest overall survival (42.2%), followed by patients with positive margins only (36.9%). Patients with both positive margins and occult pN2 disease have the lowest overall survival (31.6%), though these survival differences are not statistically significant (P=0.052). (C) Overall survival of patients receiving non-guideline concordant care. Patients with positive margins only have the highest overall survival (33.3%), followed by patients with occult pN2 disease only (23.5%). Patients with both positive margins and occult pN2 disease have the lowest overall survival (20.7%) (P<0.0001).
Figure 3 Kaplan-Meier analysis of overall survival for patients with positive margins stratified by pathologic N status. (A) Overall survival of all patients with positive margins stratified by pathologic N status. Patients with pN0 have the highest overall survival (38.0%), followed by patients with pN1 disease (26.6%). Patients with pN2 disease have the lowest overall survival (22.9%) (P<0.0001). (B) Overall survival of patients with positive margins who received guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy, stratified by pathologic N status. Patients with pN0 have the highest overall survival (39.3%), followed by patients with pN1 disease (32.1%). Patients with pN2 disease have the lowest overall survival (31.6%) (P=0.52). (C) Overall survival of patients with positive margins who received non-guideline concordant adjuvant therapy, stratified by pathologic N status. Patients with pN0 have the highest overall survival (37.8%), followed by patients with pN1 disease (25.2%). Patients with pN2 disease have the lowest overall survival (20.7%) (P<0.0001).

A Cox proportional hazard model was performed to identify the prognostic factors for overall survival. Compared to pN2, patients with positive margins had a HR=0.73 (95% CI: 0.68, 0.79, P<0.0001), while the “both” group had a HR=1.06 (95% CI: 0.93, 1.21, P=0.38) (Table 3). Post hoc analysis accounting for the interaction between form of residual disease and treatment concordance found that non-guideline concordant treatment was associated with increased risk of mortality for all forms of residual disease, though the magnitude of the effect of concordance differed by group (Table 4). For positive margins, the non-concordant cohort had a HR =1.25 (95% CI: 1.08, 1.45, P=0.0027); for pN2 disease, the non-concordant group had a HR =1.71 (95% CI: 1.58, 1.85, P<0.0001); for the “both” group, the non-concordant group had a HR =1.85 (95% CI: 1.30, 2.62, P=0.0006).

Table 3
Table 3 Cox Proportional Hazards Model for Independent Predictors of Mortality
Full table
Table 4
Table 4 Cox proportional hazards model for independent predictors of mortality when accounting for interaction between residual disease group and treatment concordance
Full table

After adjusting for patient demographics and other clinical characteristics, age greater than the median of 68 years, “other” race categorization, extended lobectomy and pneumonectomy, non-adenocarcinoma histology, tumor size >3 cm, Charlson-Deyo score >0, treatment at a comprehensive community cancer program, and non-guideline concordant treatment were associated with increased risk of mortality. Positive margins, female sex, and private insurance were associated with decreased risk of mortality. The hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals for all significant factors are shown in Table 3.


Conclusions

The findings from this study demonstrate a markedly increased mortality rate in patients who receive non-guideline concordant care in comparison to those who receive guideline-concordant care in the setting of residual disease after surgical resection of NSCLC. Though it can only be speculated as to why patients did not receive guideline-concordant care, a significant proportion of patients in our study did not receive guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy, with roughly one-third of patients with occult pN2 disease and roughly 80% of patients with positive margins or both positive margins and pN2 disease receiving non-guideline concordant care. Furthermore, the findings suggest that patients with occult pN2 disease after resection, which may represent the systemic spread of disease, have poorer overall survival than patients with positive margins after resection, which may represent local extension of disease. Understanding that there is heterogeneity in the operations performed in this analysis, the cohort was restricted to patients who underwent lobectomy or pneumonectomy, as they reflect commonly performed curative-intent operations that can result in either positive margins or positive N2 disease, which can pose clinical challenges in management. Interestingly, patients undergoing extended lobectomies or pneumonectomies were observed to have a disproportionately high incidence of positive margins. Though the exact cause of this phenomenon is unknown, it is plausible that the disproportionately high incidence of positive margins in the extended lobectomy group, in part, may be attributed to a hesitancy to perform a pneumonectomy due to possible pre-existing systemic illness or adverse cardiopulmonary status, at the expense of leaving behind a positive surgical margin.

In this study, the reported five-year overall survival of patients with occult pN2 disease who received guideline-concordant adjuvant chemotherapy of 42.2% was within the range of five-year survivals for patients with occult pN2 disease (i.e., cN0 and cN1, pN2) previously reported by other studies which ranged from 30% to 51.2% (11-16). The reported five-year overall survival of 36.9% of patients with positive margins receiving guideline-concordant care reported in the current study is within the range of survival rates previously reported, which range from 20% to 38.5% (4,6,17-19). The five-year overall survival for patients with both positive margins and occult pN2 who received guideline-concordant care in this study was 31.6%—no other studies were identified that analyzed the survival of patients with both forms of residual disease. While an N2 node in isolation is known to be a significant driver of mortality, the addition of a positive margin may further increase the burden of disease.

Currently there are a lack of universally accepted clinical guidelines regarding adjuvant therapy following discovery of residual disease. In this study, patients with occult pN2 disease who received adjuvant chemotherapy were clustered with patients receiving adjuvant chemoradiation based on the idea that N2 disease represents the systemic spread of disease and, therefore, should be treated primarily with systemic therapy rather than local radiation therapy. This theory is supported by existing clinical practice guidelines–NCCN guidelines for patients with R0 resections and occult pN2 disease recommend adjuvant chemotherapy with or without radiotherapy (7). Efficacy of adjuvant radiotherapy, however, is questionable—guidelines from the American Society for Radiation Oncology note that current clinical evidence suggests that addition of PORT to N2 disease with R0 resections “does not improve overall survival but may improve local control when compared with observation strategies (8).” A recent randomized Phase II trial by Sun et al. found no survival benefit for adjuvant concurrent chemoradiotherapy compared with adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy alone (20). This finding has been supported by previous retrospective studies as well that suggest that there are no overall survival benefits to addition of adjuvant radiotherapy versus adjuvant chemotherapy alone (10,13,21). The findings of Sun et al. must be interpreted cautiously, however, as sequential radiotherapy administered after adjuvant chemotherapy, rather than concurrent chemoradiotherapy, is more frequently performed (8,22,23).

Similarly, patients with positive margins were clustered if they received adjuvant radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy, as positive margins represent local spread of disease that can be treated with local radiotherapy. For the purposes of this study, both R1 and R2 resections were considered to be “positive margins” and were analyzed together. Because the two forms have been considered by some to be characteristically different, a supplementary analysis was performed to compare survival of patients with R1 positive margins against patients with R2 positive margins (9,24). No significant difference in overall survival was found between the two groups (data not shown, P=0.27). Current clinical guidelines regarding the efficacy of addition of systemic therapy to patients with positive margins lack clear consensus and are contradicted by recent studies. NCCN guidelines currently recommend either re-resection or adjuvant radiation therapy for R1 and R2 resections in patients with findings up to Stage IIA, as well as the addition of adjuvant chemotherapy for patients up to Stage IIIB (7). ACCP guidelines however recommend only adjuvant radiation therapy for R1 resections in patients with Stage I or II NSCLC (25). Wang et al. substantiated the use of adjuvant radiation therapy in patients with positive margins after undergoing a lobectomy or pneumonectomy for Stage II or III NSCLC, finding that the use of PORT was an independent predictor of five-year overall survival (18). In contrast to current clinical guidelines, Hancock et al. suggested that adjuvant chemotherapy alone was the most effective form of postoperative treatment of Stage I disease with positive margins with no statistically significant differences found for adjuvant radiation therapy alone or adjuvant chemoradiation therapy (3). In the same vein, Smeltzer et al. suggested that chemotherapy alone was the most effective adjuvant therapy for early-stage N0 patients with positive margins, while chemotherapy or chemoradiation therapy were associated with longer survival for patients with advanced stages of disease (19).

There are obvious limitations associated with this retrospective study inherent to using the NCDB—assignment of patients to various forms of adjuvant therapy was unobserved and therefore susceptible to uncontrolled confounding factors (26). Current guidelines also recommend re-resection as an alternative to adjuvant therapy (7). Unfortunately, a comparison of patients undergoing re-resection vs. adjuvant therapy for positive margins could not be performed owing to the fact that the NCDB does not capture data on re-resections. The NCDB also does not currently contain patient data on pre-operative mediastinal staging, characterization of pN2 disease, location of positive margins, pulmonary function tests, performance status, or specific comorbidities, which admittedly could be used to better stratify patients into homogenous cohorts and identify independent predictors of survival (27-29). The NCDB also lacks data regarding clinical reasoning behind the selection of adjuvant therapy, completion of therapy, and sequencing of therapy. It is not known whether patients who did not receive adjuvant therapy may have had risk factors that both precluded receipt of chemotherapy and predisposed them to higher mortality. While different clinical circumstances may warrant the administration of chemoradiation therapy in either a sequential or concurrent manner, current guidelines allow for either approach to be employed; thus, both were included in this study. It is acknowledged that these limitations are significant, but a registry with the breadth of information such as the NCDB has yet to be developed and employed to raise the issue in this report. Furthermore, the database has been employed at the individual participating institutions to assess their own quality metrics in other diseases; therefore, its use in assessing guideline concordance, another measure of quality, is not without precedent.

Though prior studies have independently analyzed long-term survival of N2 disease or positive margins independently, no study has comparatively analyzed both forms of residual disease using the same cohort or looked at the combined effects of having both occult N2 disease and positive margins. The findings of this study underscore the importance of adherence to guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy in the setting of residual disease after surgical resection of primary NSCLC. The deleterious effects of non-guideline concordant care seen in all three patient groups in this study, combined with the large percentage of patients that did not receive guideline-concordant care, indicate that there are a substantial number of lung cancer patients who may further benefit from optimized medical care. The secondary finding of this study—that patients with positive margins fare better than those with pN2 disease—reinforces the notion that occult pN2 disease is a systemic process that is best targeted with systemic adjuvant chemotherapy.


Acknowledgments

Manuscript was accepted to be read at the 100th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Thoracic Surgery, New York, NY (Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic). The data used in this study are derived from a deidentified NCDB file. The ACS and the CoC have not verified and are not responsible for the analytic or statistical methodology employed, or the conclusions drawn from these data by the investigator.

Funding: Li Ding was supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Science (NCATS) of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, grant numbers [UL1TR001855] and [UL1TR000130].


Footnote

Reporting Checklist: The authors have completed the STROBE reporting checklist. Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/jtd-21-110

Peer Review File: Available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/jtd-21-110

Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/jtd-21-110). LD is funded by grants UL1TR001855 from the National Center for Advancing Translational Science (NCATS) of the U.S. National Institutes of Health. AWK serves as an unpaid editorial board member of Journal of Thoracic Disease from Jan 2020 to Dec 2021. PMM serves as an unpaid editorial board member of Journal of Thoracic Disease from Apr 2020 to Mar 2022. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki (as revised in 2013).

Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.


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Cite this article as: Lieu DK, Ding L, David EA, Wightman SC, Atay SM, McFadden PM, Kim AW. Differential outcomes of residual disease in surgically-resected non-small cell lung cancer and the importance of guideline-concordant adjuvant therapy. J Thorac Dis 2021;13(5):2896-2909. doi: 10.21037/jtd-21-110

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