Worsened long-term outcomes and postoperative complications in octogenarians with lung cancer following mediastinal lymph-node dissection

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Abstract

We evaluated the effects of mediastinal lymph-node dissection on outcomes in octogenarians with primary lung cancer. Outcomes and postoperative complications were retrospectively investigated in 48 octogenarians with anatomically resected lung cancer, of whom 23 underwent a mediastinal lymph-node dissection (ND2 group) and 25 a limited lymphadenectomy (ND0-1 group). Forty-three patients underwent a lobectomy, two a pneumonectomy, and three a segmentectomy. The five-year survival rate for all was 35%, while that for those in pathological stage I was 43.3% and for those in stage II + III was 21.2%. As for lymph node dissection, the five-year survival rate for the ND0-1 group (54.3%) was superior to that for the ND2 group (21.7%) (P=0.022). For patients in pathological stage I, those rated ND0-1 had a better five-year survival than those rated ND2 (61.9% vs. 28.6%) (P=0.041). In addition, mediastinal lymph-node dissection increased the incidence of postoperative cardiac complications (P=0.004). Our results indicate that major pulmonary resection with mediastinal lymph-node dissection is associated with a higher rate of mortality in octogenarians with lung cancer. © 2009 Published by European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved.

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Chida, M., Minowa, M., Karube, Y., Eba, S., Okada, Y., Miyoshi, S., & Kondo, T. (2009). Worsened long-term outcomes and postoperative complications in octogenarians with lung cancer following mediastinal lymph-node dissection. Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery, 8(1), 89–92. https://doi.org/10.1510/icvts.2008.193383

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