Abstract

Advances in thoracoscopic surgery have made skin incisions smaller, but there are concerns about cancer cell contamination during sample extraction. We performed retrieval bag lavage cytology (BLC) during thoracoscopic surgery to evaluate the risk of cancer dissemination and the prognostic influence of BLC status. BLC was investigated in 893 patients who underwent thoracoscopic lobectomy or segmentectomy for lung cancer between 2013 and 2018. The clinicopathological features and prognosis were compared between the BLC-positive and BLC-negative groups. Forty-nine patients (5.5%) were positive for BLC. BLC correlated with pleural invasion (49.0% vs. 12.9%, P < 0.001); however, BLC was positive in 3.3% of cases without pleural invasion. Multivariate analysis revealed that tumor size, lymph node metastasis, lymphatic and pleural invasion were predictive factors for positive BLC. Prognosis was poorer in the BLC-positive group than in the BLC-negative group (5-year overall survival, 73.6% vs. 90.2%, P < 0.001); nevertheless, positive BLC was not an independent prognostic factor. The locoregional recurrence rate was higher among BLC-positive patients than among BLC-negative patients, whereas there was no significant difference in the distant recurrence rate. Positive BLC was associated with locoregional recurrence (hazard ratio 1.87, P = 0.044) and the correlation was stronger in stage I lung cancer. There were no cases of extraction bag breakage or port-site recurrence. BLC positivity was correlated with the risk of locoregional recurrence in patients with surgically resected lung cancer, although it was not an independent prognostic factor. Careful manipulation is essential for extracting specimens from the thoracic cavity.

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