Abstract

BackgroundAlthough the feasibility and safety of Uniportal-Video-Assisted thoracic surgery (U-VATS) has been proven, its surgical effectiveness is still debated. The aim of this study is to assess the equivalence of the U-VATS approach compared with an open technique in terms of surgical (nodal-upstaging, complications, and post-operative results) and short-term survival outcomes.MethodsThe clinical data of patients undergoing lobectomy for NSCLC at our center, from January 2014 to December 2019, were analyzed retrospectively. All patients undergoing open or U-VATS lobectomy with lymphadenectomy for early-stage lung cancer (cT1-T3N0, stages IA-IIB) were included in the study. Only 230 patients satisfied the inclusion criteria. Group bias was reduced through 1:1 propensity score matching, which resulted in 46 patients in each group (open surgery and U-VATS).ResultsThe intra- and post-operative mortality were null in both groups. There was no difference in the post-operative complications (p: 1.00) between U-VATS and open lobectomy. There was also no recorded difference in the pathological nodal up-staging [11 (23.9%) after thoracotomy vs. 8 (17.4%) after U-VATS, p: 0.440). The chest tube duration was longer in the open group (p: 0.025), with a higher post-operative pain (p: 0.001). Additionally, the 3-year overall survival (OS) was 78% after U-VATS lobectomy vs. 74% after open lobectomy (p: 0.204), while 3-year disease-specific survival (DSS) was 97 vs. 89% (p: 0.371), respectively. The 3-year disease-free survival (DFS) was 62% in the U-VATS group and 66% in the thoracotomy group, respectively (p: 0.917).ConclusionsUniportal-VATS lobectomy for the treatment of early-stage lung cancer seems to be a safe and effective technique with similar surgical and short-term survival outcomes as open surgery, but with lower post-operative pain and shorter in-hospital stay.

Highlights

  • An increasing number of articles have been showing the role and effectiveness of Uniportal—Video-Assisted thoracic surgery (UVATS) in performing more and more complex and technically demanding procedures, compared to traditional techniques, such as thoracotomy or triportal-Video-Assisted Thoracic Surgery (VATS)

  • The aim of this article is to assess the equivalence of Uniportal-Video-Assisted thoracic surgery (U-VATS) lobectomy in terms of surgical outcomes and short-term survival outcomes compared to traditional open surgery

  • A nodal upstaging was recorded in 24 patients (15.68%) in the open group and 11 (14.3%) in the UVATS group (p: 0.810)

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Summary

Introduction

An increasing number of articles have been showing the role and effectiveness of Uniportal—Video-Assisted thoracic surgery (UVATS) in performing more and more complex and technically demanding procedures, compared to traditional techniques, such as thoracotomy or triportal-VATS. These studies are mainly retrospective, not randomized, single-institution researches [1–6]. The aim of this study is to assess the equivalence of the U-VATS approach compared with an open technique in terms of surgical (nodal-upstaging, complications, and post-operative results) and short-term survival outcomes

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