Abstract

BackgroundLymph node involvement could help to predict the prognosis of pathological T1 (pT1, diameters of ≤3 cm) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). This study assessed the clinicopathological factors and associated lymph node involvement in invasive lung adenocarcinoma (IAC) and squamous cell lung cancer (SCC) and the overall and disease-free survival associated with these factors.MethodsThree hundred and twenty-five patients with pathological T1 NSCLC (253 IAC and 72 SCC) were retrospectively analyzed from a pool of 1094 primary lung cancer patients. The data were assessed using multiple logistic regression, Kaplan-Meier curves and multivariable analyses.ResultsAmong patients with a ≤30-mm tumor lesion (N = 325), N1 and N2 lymph node involvement was found in 28 (8.6%) and 34 (10.4%) patients, respectively. Lymph node metastasis occurred in 13.0% (33/253) of pT1 IAC patients and 40.3% (29/72) of SCC patients. Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) levels, SCC by histology, and tumor lesions larger than 1.0 cm were associated with lymph node involvement (P < 0.0001, <0.0001, and 0.048, respectively). In IAC patients, negative lymph nodes were associated with better overall survival compared with lymph node-positive ones (P = 0.021). No significant difference was observed in SCC patients regardless of lymph node status (P = 0.40). Multivariable Cox analysis revealed that lymph node involvement was an independent prognostic predictor of overall IAC patient survival (P = 0.041), but not of SCC patient survival (P = 0.470). Chemotherapy was administered to 72.2% (52/72) of SCC patients, a significantly higher rate when compared with that of IAC patients (42.3%, 107/253).ConclusionsLymph node metastasis was inversely associated with the overall survival of IAP patients, but not with the survival of SCC patients. Patients with pT1 SCC exhibited a significantly higher rate of lymph node involvement when compared with IAC patients. Thus, a systematic lymph node dissection should be performed in pT1 IAC patients, especially in patients with IAC larger than 1.0 cm, for additional treatment selections to improve survival.

Highlights

  • Lymph node involvement could help to predict the prognosis of pathological T1 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)

  • Lymph node metastasis was inversely associated with the overall survival of IAP patients, but not with the survival of squamous cell lung cancer (SCC) patients

  • Patients with pathological T1 (pT1) SCC exhibited a significantly higher rate of lymph node involvement when compared with invasive lung adenocarcinoma (IAC) patients

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Summary

Introduction

Lymph node involvement could help to predict the prognosis of pathological T1 (pT1, diameters of ≤3 cm) non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). This study assessed the clinicopathological factors and associated lymph node involvement in invasive lung adenocarcinoma (IAC) and squamous cell lung cancer (SCC) and the overall and disease-free survival associated with these factors. Cancer metastasis (e.g., lymph node metastasis or distant metastasis to other organs) significantly contributes to lung cancer patient death [3, 4]. The vast majority of diagnosed NSCLCs are adenocarcinomas (ADCs) or squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs), and the incidence of lung ADC has increased rapidly, becoming the most common histological subtype [5, 6]. The effect of clinicopathological characteristics on lung cancer lymph node metastasis in patients with pathological T1 (pT1) NSCLC remains the subject of debate, including histological subtype, tumor localization, and pleural and vascular invasion.

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