Abstract
Background: Elderly patients are under-represented in studies of pure ground-glass opacity (pGGO) nodules; thus, this study analyzed the growth pattern and clinical outcomes of pGGO nodules in the elderly in order to help make treatment decisions. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed patients aged over 60 years with screening-detected and pathologically confirmed growing focal pGGO nodules. Results: During the study period, 858 subjects had undergone at least three low-dose computed tomography scans in our center. Twenty patients were treated for growing focal pGGO nodules. The median age at detection was 66 years (range: 60–80). The median time to an increase of at least 2 mm was 348 days (range: 98–1527) and to develop a solid portion, 1141 days (range: 480–3010). Seven patients had surgery for increased nodule size, four had surgery immediately after the solid portion appeared, and nine were treated after a median follow-up of 1153 days (range: 240–2342) since the solid portion developed. The median size of the solid component was 8 mm (2–13) before surgery. No recurrence was observed after a median follow-up of 41 months. Pathology revealed adenocarcinoma in situ in five patients, and minimally invasive or invasive adenocarcinoma in the remainder. The appearance of a solid portion was significantly associated with invasive adenocarcinoma compared to increased size alone (100% vs. 44.4%; P = 0.005). Conclusions: pGGO nodules had an indolent growth pattern and good prognosis in our patient sample, even after the appearance of a solid portion. Therefore, minimally invasive surgery after the development of a solid component may be an option for the elderly.
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Nie, X., Li, L., Huang, J., Zhang, P., Shi, H., Cheng, G., & Zhang, Y. Q. (2018). From focal pulmonary pure ground-glass opacity nodule detected by low-dose computed tomography into invasive lung adenocarcinoma: A growth pattern analysis in the elderly. Thoracic Cancer, 9(11), 1361–1365. https://doi.org/10.1111/1759-7714.12829
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