Abstract

The clinicopathologic features of 50 cases of surgically resected small cell carcinoma were reevaluated (doubly blinded). Two pulmonary carcinomas were excluded because neuroendocrine features could not be demonstrated; two additional cases also were excluded because the tumors grossly invaded the chest wall and their pulmonary origin was not substantiated. Thirty-four tumors were confirmed to be small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (SCNC). Only seven of 11 (64%) patients with T1N0,T2N0 tumors survived more than 1 year; one of 11 (9%) patients survived more than 2 years. In 12 cases, the diagnosis was changed to well-differentiated neuroendocrine carcinoma (WDNC). Of these, nine of nine (100%) patients with T1N0,T2N0 tumors survived more than 1 year; six of eight (75%) patients survived more than 2 years. These observations strongly indicate that a significant number of long-term survivors with the diagnosis of small cell carcinoma may, in fact, have a distinctly less aggressive type of pulmonary neuroendocrine carcinoma. It was concluded that the distinction between small cell and well-differentiated types of neuroendocrine carcinomas has significant prognostic and therapeutic implications.

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