Annals of Thoracic Surgery Short Reports (Sep 2024)

Segmentectomy vs Lobectomy for Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer: The Impact of Tumor Location

  • Lye-Yeng Wong, MD,
  • Ntemena Kapula, MS,
  • Irmina A. Elliott, MD,
  • Douglas Z. Liou, MD,
  • Leah M. Backhus, MD,
  • Natalie S. Lui, MD,
  • Joseph B. Shrager, MD,
  • Mark F. Berry, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 3
pp. 458 – 463

Abstract

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Background: The technical complexity of segmentectomy and preservation of lung parenchyma compared with lobectomy vary by lobe. This study evaluated the impact of non-small cell lung cancer tumor location on segmentectomy use and outcomes. Methods: Outcomes after lobectomy or segmentectomy for cT1N0M0 (≤2 cm) non-small cell lung cancer patients stratified by tumor location in smaller (right upper/middle) vs larger (bilateral lower/left upper) lobes were evaluated with logistic regression, Kaplan-Meier curves, and Cox proportional hazards methods. Results: A minority of patients in the cohort (N = 31,243) underwent segmentectomy (n = 2783, 9%). Segmentectomy was more common for tumors in larger compared with smaller lobes (11.8% vs 5.1%, P < .001). Major morbidity after segmentectomy was significantly lower than lobectomy for both smaller (2.6% vs 5.7%, odds ratio, 0.41, P < .001) and larger (2.5% vs 5.2%, odds ratio, 0.46, P < .001) lobes. Segmentectomy was associated with smaller lymph node harvest for both types of lobes (small lobes 7.0 vs 10.5, P < .001; large lobes 7.5 vs 10.4, P < .001) but did not compromise survival in multivariate analysis for both small (hazard ratio, 0.99, P = .9) and large (hazard ratio, 1.05, P = .34) lobes. Conclusions: Segmentectomy that does not compromise oncologic principles should be considered if complete resection is feasible regardless of tumor location.