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Pulmonary resection in patients with nonsmall-cell lung cancer treated with gamma-knife radiosurgery for synchronous brain metastases

โœ Scribed by Seung-Yeob Yang; Dong Gyu Kim; Se-Hoon Lee; Hyun-Tai Chung; Sun Ha Paek; Joo Hyun Kim; Hee-Won Jung; Dae Hee Han


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
129 KB
Volume
112
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

BACKGROUND

The aim of the current study was to determine whether a pulmonary resection and gammaโ€knife radiosurgery (GKRS) protocol is superior to GKRS alone in selected patients with stage IV nonsmallโ€cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

METHODS

The authors performed a retrospective caseโ€control study of 232 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed NSCLC from January 1998 to December 2005 and screened them to identify a study cohort in which all patients had thoracic stage I or II, Karnofsky performance status โ‰ฅ70, no extracranial metastases, and 1โ€“3 synchronous brain metastases of less than 3 cm, and were treated with GKRS (n = 31). The study cohort was divided into 2 groups, those with and without concomitant pulmonary resection.

RESULTS

Sixteen patients with pulmonary resection were assigned to the treatment group and 15 without pulmonary resection were assigned to the control group. Median followโ€up was 27.3 months (range, 4.4 months to 90.9 months). Mean survivals for the treatment group and the control group were 64.9 and 18.1 months, respectively (P < .001). There was a statistically significant association between pulmonary resection and better survival (OR = 78.408). Oneโ€year and 5โ€year local brain tumor control rates were 97.1% and 93.5%, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS

The pulmonary resection and GKRS protocol could prolong survival in patients with thoracic stage I or II NSCLC, no extracranial metastases, and a limited number of small synchronous brain metastases. Cancer 2008. ยฉ 2008 American Cancer Society.


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