Abstract

BackgroundThe 8th edition of the American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system for lung cancer made major revisions to T staging, especially the size division of stage II/III patients. However, the value of tumor size in the postoperative prognosis of IIIA–N2 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is seldom mentioned, and survival data of such patients should be re-evaluated according to the 8th edition staging system.MethodsPatients with IIIA-N2 NSCLC after surgery were identified in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results database (n=4,128). All patients were stratified according to tumor size, 5-year overall survival (OS) was then compared. Cox regression analysis was used to determine the value of size to discriminate patients with prognostic differences and establish a predictive nomogram system. Patients with IIIA-N2 NSCLC from our own institute (n=583) were used to validate the results.ResultsThe prognosis of patients with tumor sizes of 0–2, 2–4 and 4–5 cm differed greatly from each other in the training cohort, with 5-year OS rates of 53.7%, 43.9% and 36.9% respectively (P<0.001), in the validation cohort, the rates were 54.1%, 38.4% and 33.8% respectively. Tumor size >2 cm was considered an independent risk factor compared to the ≤2 cm group in the Cox regression analysis: 2–4 cm (HR =1.25, 1.12–1.39; P<0.001), 4–5 cm (HR =1.51, 1.32–1.39; P<0.001), the validation cohort showed the same trend. The concordance index of the training set was 0.634 (0.622–0.646), while that of the validation set was 0.716 (0.686–0.746). The calibration plot showed optimal consistency between the nomogram predicted survival and observed survival.ConclusionsTumors with different sizes showed significant postoperative survival differences among patients with IIIA-N2 NSCLC. Tumor size should be considered when making surgery decisions in such patients, with tumor size ≤2 cm showing considerably better prognosis.

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