Abstract

BackgroundLymph node (LN) involvement was not rare in patients with radiological solid-predominant part-solid nodules (PSNs). The lymph node dissection (LND) strategy remained unclear. Materials and MethodsSix hundred seventy-two patients with clinical N0 solid-predominant PSNs (0.5 < consolidation-to-tumor ratio < 1) receiving systematic LND (development cohort, n = 598) or limited LND (validation cohort A, n = 74) at 2 Chinese institutions from 2008 to 2016 were collected. The development cohort was utilized to investigate the incidence and pattern of LN metastasis. Lobe-specific LN metastasis pattern was defined as superior mediastinal LN involvement from upper-lobe tumor or inferior mediastinal LN involvement from lower-lobe tumor. To further validate the LN metastasis pattern observed in the development cohort, validation cohort B consisting of 7273 patients with primary lung adenocarcinomas who received surgery from 2016 to 2021 was identified. The clinical outcomes between the development cohort and validation cohort A were compared in order to assess the feasibility of limited LND. ResultsLN involvement rate for solid-predominant PSNs was 10.0%. Larger solid component diameter (P = .005) was independently associated with increased risk of LN involvement. In upper/lower lobes solid-predominant PSNs with solid component diameter ≤ 2 cm, a lobe-specific LN involvement pattern was identified. Further validation indicated that the observed mediastinal LN involvement pattern was generalizable, and the oncologic outcomes did not vary by the extent of LND in solid-predominant PSNs with solid component diameter ≤ 2 cm. ConclusionLobe-specific LND might be feasible for solid-predominant PSNs with solid component diameter ≤ 2 cm. For other solid-predominant PSNs, systematic LND should be recommended.

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