[Long-term follow-up study of the surgical treatment of pulmonary adenocarcinoma].

1990 
: The surgical treatment of pulmonary adenocarcinoma was studied on the basis of the postoperative long-term results in 211 cases. The overall five-year survival rate was 42% for adenocarcinoma and 48% for squamous cell carcinoma, and there was no significant difference. In stage I, as the degree of differentiation became lower, the prognosis became poorer. In stage III, the five-year survival rate was 50% for the alveolar cell type and 32% for the well differentiated type. The prognosis was better than in the moderately or poorly differentiated types. The prognosis of T1N0 cases was 79% in T1, but it was significantly lower 39% for T2 cases. Among T3 or T4 cases other than N2, the two-year survival rate was 15%, and the longest survival recorded was 32 months. The results were also poor in 9 cases undergoing extensive surgery, with the two-year survival rate being only 10%. Of the N2 cases undergoing extensive surgery all died within a year, except for one case surviving two years following panpleuro-pneumonectomy. In N2, the prognosis was significantly worse if there were two or more foci of mediastinal lymph node metastasis or if subcarinal lymph node metastasis was present. In the long surviving cases, cancer-bearing survivors were about twice as common as with squamous cell carcinoma. Recurrence was usually by distant metastasis (mainly to the brain), being twice as common as local recurrence. Therefore, in adenocarcinoma the significance of postoperative adjuvant therapy was considered to be greater than in squamous cell carcinoma.
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