Publication | Closed Access
Midterm Results of Thoracoscopic Surgery for Pulmonary Metastases Especially from Colorectal Cancers
19
Citations
26
References
1998
Year
Surgical OncologyColorectal SurgeryThoracic UltrasoundSurgeryEndoscopic ImagingOncologyThoracoscopic SurgeryMidterm ResultsRadiologyHealth SciencesSurvival RateColorectal Cancer LungMedical ImagingColorectal CancersPulmonary BlastomaThoracoscopic ResectionLung CancerMultiple Pulmonary NoduleBronchial NeoplasmThoracic SurgeryMedicine
Indications for thoracoscopic metastatectomy remain controversial because not all metastatic tumors may be detected without the manual palpation that is possible with thoracotomy. However, the accuracy (92%) of preoperative lung imaging in patients with one or two lesions led us to re-evaluate thoracoscopic metastatectomy with patient survival as the primary end point. Thoracoscopic wedge resection using an endoscopic stapling device or video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) lobectomy was performed in patients with one or two pulmonary metastases. Thoracoscopic resection was performed in 27 patients with 22 solitary lesions and 5 patients with two lesions. The primary tumors were colorectal cancer (15), testicular cancer (3), osteosarcoma (2), and seven other histologies. In 5 of 27 patients (18.5%) a thoracoscopic operation was converted to a VATS procedure, which requires minithoracotomy to identify metastasis primary by digital palpation. The 3-year survival rate for colorectal cancer patients who underwent thoracoscopic resection was 56.4%, in comparison to 48.6% in historical control thoracotomy patients (n = 16). There was no statistically significant difference between the two groups. Thoracoscopic resection of one or two colorectal cancer lung metastases results in a survival rate similar to standard thoracotomy, and thereby provides an acceptable alternative to this more invasive approach.
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