Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2020)

Clinicopathological Factors Related to Recurrence Patterns of Resected Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

  • Reiko Shimizu,
  • Tomomari Kinoshita,
  • Naomichi Sasaki,
  • Mao Uematsu,
  • Yusuke Sugita,
  • Toshiyuki Shima,
  • Masahiko Harada,
  • Tsunekazu Hishima,
  • Hirotoshi Horio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082473
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 2473

Abstract

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Even after complete resection, non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) shows preferential recurrence in the mediastinal lymph nodes, lungs, brain, bone, liver, and adrenal gland. However, the relationship between clinicopathological factors and recurrence patterns after resection has not been well-evaluated. Among 688 NSCLC cases with complete resection between 2004 and 2016, 233 cases recurred at our institute. On multivariate analyses, NSCLCs with lymph node metastasis and pulmonary metastasis at surgery commonly recurred in the mediastinal lymph nodes and lungs, respectively. Young age, adenocarcinoma, and vascular invasion were correlated with brain metastasis. Although no variable was associated with bone metastasis, vascular invasion was correlated with postoperative liver and adrenal gland metastasis. Pathologically proven stage II or III NSCLC, adenocarcinoma, and the presence of lymphatic permeation would result in multiple metastases. Vascular invasion, larger invasive size, and advanced stage were independent risk factors of early recurrence. Considering survival, vascular invasion, elderly age, and non-adenocarcinoma were unfavorable prognostic factors after recurrence. Some clinicopathological variables were correlated with organ-specific metastasis and post-recurrence survival. Particularly, vascular invasion was a biomarker of brain, liver, and adrenal gland metastases and a prognostic marker after recurrence among completely resected NSCLC. This information is useful for more frequent patient follow-up and identifying organ-specific distant metastasis.

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