Abstract

The role of surgical resection in the management of patients with small cell lung cancer remains to be defined. Some data suggest the potential benefit of resection in the few patients with very limited disease (peripheral T1N0 and T2N0 lesions), and there are chemotherapy regimens with 80-85% response rates in patients with more extensive but still localized disease. Interest has been reawakened in the role of adjuvant surgical resection in selected patients by 2 approaches: in patients with peripheral T1 or T2 lesions with negative mediastinal exploration, initial surgical resection followed by an adequate chemotherapeutic regimen and prophylactic cranial irradiation has resulted in an 80% disease-free survival at 30 months; initial chemotherapy in patients with only localized disease is followed by resection in the responders. Approximately 30% of the responders have undergone exploratory thoracotomy after completion of the chemotherapy. Local irradiation, as well as prophylactic cranial irradiation, generally has been used postoperatively. Early pilot studies suggest benefit of this approach in patients found to have T1-3 N0-1 disease but not in those with N2 disease. Prospective, randomized, clinical trials by the Lung Cancer Study Group in North America and its counterparts in Europe are now being carried out in hopes of supplying definitive data relative to this multi-modality therapy in small cell lung cancer. Unfortunately, no data are available to date.

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