We aimed to clarify clinical profiles of patients with adenocarcinoma presenting as multifocal ground-glass opacities (MGGOs) to assess their prognosis and the optimal management method for residual satellite lesions. We identified 190 patients with cN0 MGGOs (MGGO cohort) and 1426 patients with solitary lung adenocarcinoma (control cohort) who underwent complete resection between 2004 and 2016. Propensity score matching was performed to adjust for differences in baseline characteristics of both cohorts for survival analyses. MGGOs consist of a main tumor and satellite lesions and were subdivided into 3 groups: the PG group, with multifocal pure GGOs; the GD group, in which the main tumor presented as GGO dominant; and the SD group, where the main tumor presented as solid dominant. No significant differences in recurrence-free survival were observed between the 2 cohorts before and after the propensity score matching. For patients with MGGOs, 22 were in the PG group, 47 in the GD group, and 121 in the SD group. Type of MGGOs was a significant factor for recurrence-free survival recurrence-free survival both in the entire population (SD vs PG-GD, P= .008) and in p-stage I cohorts (P= .004) on multivariable analysis. Among 116 patients (61.1%) with residual satellite lesions, 38 patients had progressed lesions and 69 stable lesions. Although the emergence of new lesions during the follow-up period was an independent predictor for satellite lesion progression, neither progressed lesions nor the emergence of new lesions influenced survival. Patients with MGGOs and solitary adenocarcinoma had a similar prognosis. The biologic behavior of main tumors dominates clinical outcomes in patients with MGGOs.
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