Abstract

7563 Background: We evaluate effect of postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy on overall survival after complete resection of stage III-N2 non-small-cell lung cancer. Methods: From Jan.1999 to Dec. 2003, a total of 150 stage III-N2 non-small cell lung cancer patients randomly received four cycles of chemotherapy (NVB25mg/m2, D1,D5 or paclitaxel 175mg/m2, D1 / carboplatin AUC=5, D1) or observation after operation. Results: The median survival for the 150 patients was 879 days, with a 1-year survival rate of 81%, 3-year survival rate of 43%, and 5-year survival rate of 28%.There was significant difference in median survival between chemotherapy and control group (897 days vs 821 days p=0.04), and also there was significant difference in 5-year survival rate (30% vs 24% p<0.05). The most common site of recurrence was brain. 26% (39/150) of patients recurred in the brain as their first site, 22% (18/79) for chemotherapy group, 29% (21/71) for control group. The median survival time for brain metastasis patients between chemotherapy and control group is no difference (812 days vs 512 days, p=0.122), but there was significant difference in 2-year survival rate (66.71% vs 37.6% p<0.05). Conclusions: Postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy dose significantly improves median survival among completely resected stage III-N2 non-small-cell lung cancer patients, and significantly improves 5-year survival rate. It dose not decrease incidence of brain metastasis but postpone the time of brain metastasis in chemotherapy group. No significant financial relationships to disclose.

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