Abstract

Introduction: The standard surgical procedures for patients with early-stage NSCLC is lobectomy-associated radical lymphadenectomy performed by using the thoracotomy approach. In the last few years, minimally invasive techniques have increasingly strengthened their role in lung cancer treatment, especially in the early stage of the disease. Although the lobectomy technique has been accepted, controversy still surrounds lymph node dissection. In our study, we analyze the rate of upstaging early non-small cell lung cancer patients who underwent radical surgical treatment using the robotic and the VATS techniques compared to the standard thoracotomy approach.Methods and Materials: We retrospectively reviewed patients who underwent a lobectomy and radical lymphadenectomy at our Institute between 2010 and 2019. We selected 505 patients who met the inclusion criteria of the study: 237 patients underwent robotic surgery, 158 patients had thoracotomy, and 110 patients were treated with VATS. We analyzed the demographic features between the groups as well as the nodal upstaging rate after pathological examination, the number of dissected lymph nodes and the ratio of dissected lymph nodes to metastatic lymph nodes of the three groups.Results: The patients of the three groups were homogenous with respect to age, sex, and histology. The postoperative major morbidity rate was significantly higher in the thoracotomy group, and hospital stay was significantly longer. The percentage of the mediastinal nodal upstaging rate and the number of dissected lymph nodes was significantly higher in the robotic group compared with the VATS group. The ratio of dissected lymph nodes to metastatic lymph nodes was significantly lower compared with the VATS group and the thoracotomy group.Discussion: The prognostic impact of the R(un) status is still highly debated. A surgical approach that allows better results in terms of resection has still not been defined. Our results show that robotic surgery is a safe and feasible approach especially regarding the accuracy of mediastinal lymphadenectomy. These findings can lead to defining a more precise pathological stage of the disease and, if necessary, to more accurate postoperative treatment.

Highlights

  • The standard surgical procedures for patients with early-stage Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is lobectomy-associated radical lymphadenectomy performed by using the thoracotomy approach

  • The study was designed as a single-center and retrospective casematched analysis (VATS vs. thoracotomy vs. Robotic-Assisted Thoracic Surgery, RATS) in patients presenting with early stage NSCLC with clinical N0 who underwent curative surgery

  • The general inclusion criteria for this study were patients diagnosed with NSCLC at stages I–II with clinical N0 disease undergoing anatomical lobectomy plus systematic lymph node dissection

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The standard surgical procedures for patients with early-stage NSCLC is lobectomy-associated radical lymphadenectomy performed by using the thoracotomy approach. We analyze the rate of upstaging early non-small cell lung cancer patients who underwent radical surgical treatment using the robotic and the VATS techniques compared to the standard thoracotomy approach. Despite the fact that the open thoracotomy technique is considered the gold standard, minimally invasive lobectomy has been associated with improved perioperative and comparable long-term outcomes [9]. We evaluated patients with early-stage NSCLC who underwent pulmonary resection and radical lymphadenectomy with robotic technology compared to other surgical techniques. We evaluated the nodal upstaging rate of VATS and robotic surgery compared with the gold standard, the thoracotomy approach. We retrospectively evaluated the value of the ratio of positive lymph nodes compared to removed lymph nodes

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call