Abstract

The aim of the present study was to compare the short-term outcomes between spontaneous ventilation video-assisted thoracic surgery (SV-VATS) and mechanical ventilation video-assisted thoracic surgery (MV-VATS) in the elderly. All patients included in the present study underwent lobectomy, segmentectomy, or wedge resection and lymph node dissection. A retrospective cohor. The first affiliated hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China. The present study included 799 elderly patients diagnosed with non-small-cell lung cancer undergoing SV-VATS or MV-VATS. After propensity score matching, 80 patients in the SV-VATS group and 80 patients in the MV-VATS group were analyzed. Patients in the SV-VATS group received spontaneous-ventilation anesthesia, which was administered as follows: intravenous anesthesia+laryngeal mask airway+thoracic paravertebral block+visceral pleural surface anesthesia+thoracic vagus nerve block. Patients in the MV-VATS group received general endotracheal anesthesia. SV-VATS or MV-VATS was performed according to the preference of the patients. There were no significant differences in anesthesia time (226.3 ± 79.8 v 238.5 ± 66.2 min; p=0.44), surgery time (166.2 ± 102.6 v 170.1 ± 83.4 min; p=0.66), and number of dissected lymph nodes (5.3 ± 7.5 v 4.4 ± 7.4; p=0.23) between the two groups. There were significant differences in intraoperative bleeding (61.5 ± 165.1 v 82.2 ± 116.9 mL; p < 0.001). After surgery, the two groups were statistically comparable in terms of hospitalization (17.6 ± 7.6 v 17.2 ± 6.9 days; p=0.95) and incidence of complications (7.5% v 13.8%; p=0.20), while there were significant differences in chest tube duration (6.1 ± 3.3 v 4.5 ± 1.2 days; p < 0.001). SV-VATS is feasible and as safe as MV-VATS, and it could be considered as an alternative treatment for the elderly.

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