Journal of Chest Surgery (Nov 2024)

Outcomes and Survival for Early-Stage Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Following Wedge Resection or Lobectomy: A Propensity Score-Matched Analysis Using a Novel Peruvian Registry

  • Wildor Samir Cubas Llalle,
  • Franco Albán-Sánchez,
  • José Torres-Neyra,
  • Wildor Dongo-Minaya,
  • Katherine Inga-Moya,
  • Johnny Mayta,
  • Juan Velásquez,
  • Jorge Mantilla,
  • Karen Mendoza,
  • Rafael Vicuña,
  • Victor Mendizabal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5090/jcs.24.029
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 57, no. 6
pp. 501 – 510

Abstract

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Background: Using a previously unreported Peruvian registry of patients treated for early- stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), this study explored whether wedge resection and lobectomy were equivalent regarding survival and impact on radiologic-pathologic variables. Methods: This observational, analytical, longitudinal study used propensity scorematched (PSM) analysis of a single-center retrospective registry of 2,570 patients with pathologic stage I–II NSCLC who were treated with wedge resection (n=1,845) or lobectomy (n=725) during 2000–2020. After PSM, 650 cases were analyzed (resection, n=325; lobectomy, n=325) through preoperative and clinical variables, including patients with ≥1 lymph node removed. Kaplan-Meier curves and multivariable Cox proportional hazard models were created for 5-year overall survival (OS), disease-free survival (DFS), and locoregional- recurrence-free survival (LRFS). Results: The principal complication was operative pain persisting >7 days for lobectomy versus wedge resection (58% vs. 23%, p=0.034) and shorter hospital stays for resection than for lobectomy (5.3 days vs. 12.8 days, p=0.009). The 5-year OS (84.3% vs. 81.2%, p=0.09) and DFS (79.1% vs. 74.1%, p=0.07) were similar and statistically insignificant between resections and lobectomies, respectively. LRFS was worse overall following wedge resection than lobectomy (79.8% vs. 91.1%, p10 mm (90.9% vs. 87.3%, p<0.048) and ≥4 lymph nodes were removed (82.8% vs. 79.1%, p<0.011). Conclusion: Both techniques led to similar OS and DFS at 5 years; however, successful LRFS required a wedge resection with a surgical margin and adequate lymph node removal to obtain outcomes similar to lobectomy.

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