For patients with lung cancer, the greatest hope for cure rests with patients with early stage disease. Surgery has been the standard of care for this group with the best 5-year survival of only 65% being achieved in patients with earliest pathologic Stage IA disease. Using strategies gained from th
Surgical management of adrenal metastases from lung cancer
โ Scribed by Beitler, Alan L.; Urschel, John D.; Velagapudi, Satish R. C.; Takita, Hiroshi
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 49 KB
- Volume
- 69
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-4790
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Background and Objectives: Adrenal metastases from lung cancer usually indicate systemic disease and incurability. However, a small subset of patients with isolated adrenal metastases may achieve long-term survival with aggressive surgical resection of the adrenal gland. To clarify the role of adrenalectomy for metastatic lung cancer, we undertook a review of the published literature on this topic. Methods: The English-language medical literature was searched for papers reporting surgical resection of adrenal metastases from lung cancer. Eleven articles were retrieved and their data pooled for analysis. Results: Sixty patients (including seven previously reported from our institution) formed the basis of this collective review. Thirty-two patients pooled from small series and case reports had a median survival of 24 months, and approximately one-third were 5-year survivors. Twenty-eight patients reported in two large series had a less favorable survival (approximately 14 months median survival). Conclusions: Surgical resection of isolated adrenal metastases from lung cancer appears to have a modest survival advantage over nonoperative therapy, and it occasionally results in long-term survival. However, the relatively encouraging survival results reported in the literature could be related to careful patient selection for this aggressive therapy, publication bias in favor of positive treatment outcomes, or a combination of the two. Nevertheless, the results are encouraging enough to justify further investigation of this aggressive treatment strategy. Practical guidelines for management are proposed.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Background and Objectives: There are no reports concerning surgical treatment on pulmonary metastases from gastric cancer. The aims of this study were to characterize patients with pulmonary metastasis from gastric cancer and to determine the efficacy of surgical therapy. Methods: Between 1977 and 1
A significant number of patients who undergo complete resection of colorectal carcinoma develop pulmonary metastases. Despite advances in systemic chemotherapy, resection of the metastases localized to lungs remains the only mode of curative treatment. Control of primary disease, ability to resect a
## BACKGROUND. Patients with metastatic disease to the bone present a management challenge. Of the complications encountered in these patients, the predominant types that require surgical intervention are pathologic or impending fractures and neurologic compromise secondary to cord compression fro
Vulvar cancer is an uncommon disease, marked by typical long delays in diagnosis due to lack of awareness by doctors and patients. The most common histology is squamous, although melanoma, sarcoma and adenocarcinoma occur less frequently. The predictable spread pattern of vulvar cancer to regional t
Ovarian cancer affects over 25,000 women each year in the United States. The performance of appropriate surgery for ovarian cancer is critical in directing further therapies and improving survival. Systematic surgical staging must be performed in patients who appear to have early stage ovarian cance