An increase in the stage of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) due to cancer positive lymph node (LN) discovery was more common following open chest surgery for lung lobe removal of early stage lung cancer compared to the closed chest procedure known as video assisted thoracic surgery (VATS).

The standard and often most effective treatment for early stage is surgical removal of the tumor and a portion of the lung, with the open thoracotomy the traditional method of choice. Thoracotomies do pose some risk, especially in with other health problems. VATS is a less invasive approach that has fewer complications, less pain, improved , shorter recovery periods, and lower acute care costs. However, incomplete LN staging by VATS could compromise survival by leaving residual and altering optimal post-surgical treatment because of inaccurate understaging.

The National Cancer Data Base, an oncology outcomes database maintained by the American Cancer Society and the American College of Surgeons with 30 million historical records, was examined for NSCLC patients who underwent lobectomy between 2010 and 2011 for tumors smaller than 7 cm and no apparent LN involvement prior to surgery. Statistical analyses were performed to compare nodal upstaging in VATS compared to open thoracotomies and to determine if there were differences depending on surgical center. By definition, community cancer programs treat 100 to 500 cancer cases per year, comprehensive community cancer programs more than 500 cases, and academic or research programs more than 500 cases in addition to providing postgraduate medical education.

The results published in the Journal of Thoracic Oncology, the official journal of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer, show a total of 16,983 lobectomies were performed; 29.1% using VATS. Of all 4,935 VATS, 4.9% were performed at community centers, 50% at comprehensive community cancer programs, and 45.1% at academic or research centers. Upstaging because of the discovery of cancer in LN during surgery was more frequent in the open vs. closed group (12.8% vs. 10.3%; p<0.001), even though a greater number of LNs (?9 LNs, 43.7% vs. 38.8%; p<0.001) were sampled using VATS. The open approach resulted in longer length of hospital stay (mean 7.4 versus 6.1 days, p<0.001), and a higher 30-day mortality rate (2.1% vs. 1.3%; p<0.001), whereas VATS was more likely to lead to an unplanned 30-day readmission (6.9% vs. 5.9%; p=0.014). For patients who were treated in an academic or research facility, the difference in nodal upstaging for open lobectomy versus VATS was no longer statistically significant (12.2% vs 10.5%; p=0.08; n=2008 per group), but was numerically higher.

The authors suggest that, "Nodal upstaging appears to be affected by facility type, which may represent a surrogate for expertise in minimally invasive surgical procedures." For the future, the authors note, "Standardized quality assurance of lymph node staging during VATS lobectomy is needed to achieve the goal of eliminating differences in staging and there needs to be an analysis of differences in long-term survival rates between VATS and open thoracotomy for lobectomy to ensure that minimally invasive approaches provide tumor control equivalent to that provided by open approaches."

Journal information: Journal of Thoracic Oncology

Provided by International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer