Surgical treatment of stage IV non-small cell lung cancer

2012 
Most stage IV non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients are not amenable to curative treatment. The purpose of this study was to analyse our initial experience with an aggressive surgical strategy for stage IV NSCLC, and to define which patients can benefit from this treatment. Forty-six stage IV NSCLC patients who underwent surgical resection of both primary lung cancer and metastatic sites from April 1989 to December 2010 were included in this study. The record of each patient was reviewed for age, gender, pN status, sites of metastasis, histology, surgical procedure and duration of survival. There were 13 females and 33 males. Their median age was 62.0 years (range, 44–82 years). The overall 5-year survival rate was 23.3% (median, 20.0 months), and the disease-free survival rate was 15.8% at 5 years (median, 16.1 months). Patients with the pN2 status had a significantly worse survival than patients with a pN0 or pN1 status (8.6 versus 33.1%, P = 0.0497). According to a multivariate Cox proportional hazards analysis, no independent predictor of survival was identified. The results of our study suggest that surgical treatment can extend the survival in stage IV NSCLC patients if the patients can tolerate surgery.
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