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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1999;117:225-233
© 1999 Mosby, Inc.
GENERAL THORACIC SURGERY |
From the Department of Thoracic Surgery, University "La Sapienza," Rome, Italy.
Consulting Statistician: Dr. Claudio Ceccarelli, National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT).
Read at the Seventy-eighth Annual Meeting of The American Association for Thoracic Surgery, Boston, Mass, May 3-6, 1998.
Received for publication May 8, 1998. Revisions requested June 30, 1998. Revisions received Aug 14, 1998. Accepted for publication Oct 1, 1998. Address for reprints: Erino A. Rendina, MD, Department of Thoracic Surgery, University "La Sapienza" Rome, Policlinico Umberto I°, 00161, Rome, Italy.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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| Materials and methods |
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1. Clinical: superior vena cava (SVC) syndrome (9 patients), vocal cord paralysis (6 patients), dysphagia from esophageal involvement (1 patient).
2. Radiologic: CT and MR evidence of infiltration (10 patients). This group was subjected to a potential margin of error. We were conscious of this risk and had made all efforts to restrict the number of these patients. Because it is the rule in our Department, all CT and MR images were reviewed by us before a final decision was reached. In 2 patients the tumor surrounded the SVC for more than 50% of its circumference without causing SVC syndrome; 2 patients had erosion of the vertebral body; 3 patients experienced the sudden appearance of atrial fibrillation associated with a neoplasm occluding the lower pulmonary vein and extending over the left atrium with no cleavage plane; in 3 patients the tumor infiltrated the aorta and the origin of the left pulmonary artery inside the pericardium. Eight of these patients also had mediastinoscopy.
3. Bronchoscopic: Infiltration of the trachea, tracheobronchial angle, or carina (11 patients).
4. Thoracoscopic: Histologically proven mediastinal infiltration (20 patients). Thoracoscopy was performed in these patients as previously described.
11,12
All patients fulfilling these criteria and undergoing induction chemotherapy at our institution between January 1990 and April 1996 were included in the study.
We did not use thoracotomy as a staging technique. Mediastinoscopy was performed in 38 patients. Four patients underwent mediastinoscopy and thoracoscopy. All invasive staging procedures (bronchoscopy, mediastinoscopy, and thoracoscopy) were performed by us. The standard chemotherapy protocol consisted of 3 cycles of the mitomycin-vinblastine-platinum regimen. Cisplatin (120 mg/m2) was administered intravenously in a 20-minute infusion with hydration on days 1 and 29. Mitomycin (2 mg/m2) was administered intravenously on days 1 to 5. Vinblastine (4 mg/m2) was administered on days 1, 8, 15, 22, and 29. One to 3 weeks after completion of the induction chemotherapy, the disease of each patient was completely reevaluated. The disease was restaged by clinical examination, complete laboratory work-up, chest radiography, total body CT, and bone scan. The cardiorespiratory status of the patient was reassessed by spirometry, blood gas analysis, and electrocardiography. Echocardiography, ventilation/perfusion lung scans, Holter monitoring, and stress testing were selectively performed in patients who were at risk. Patients in whom distant metastasis developed (5 patients), those who showed local progression of disease (6 patients), and those having severe toxicity related to the induction therapy (4 patients) were not considered for an operation. All surgical procedures were performed by the same team. Standard posterolateral thoracotomy, pulmonary resection, and complete hilar and mediastinal lymphadenectomy were attempted. The resection of portions of the infiltrated mediastinal organs was performed when necessary to obtain tumor-negative resection margins. Multiple frozen section examinations were performed routinely. The resection was recorded as complete when all resection margins were negative. After the operation, patients with complete resection of the primary tumor, with microscopically negative margins, and negative N1 and N2 nodes did not receive additional treatment. Patients whose disease appeared unresectable or who had microscopically positive margins or positive N1 and/or N2 nodes received additional chemotherapy (2 cycles of the same regimen), radiotherapy (3.500 rad), or chemoradiotherapy. Postoperative adjuvant therapy was started 3 to 6 weeks after the operation. Follow-up is complete for all patients. Survival is reported by intent to treat and was calculated from the start of induction chemotherapy with the product limit method by Kaplan and Meier.
13 Differences among curves were analyzed by the log-rank test and the chi-squared test. Completeness of resection, preinduction therapy N status, and histologic type were evaluated as predictors of survival. All deaths were included in the analysis.
| Results |
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| Comment |
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Because induction therapy based on the MVP regimen proved effective in downstaging N2 disease, we have used it for unresectable T4 tumors. An induction program of concurrent chemoradiotherapy could theoretically seem more appropriate for patients whose major problem is a locally infiltrative, often large, tumor burden associated with the threat of distant metastases in 40% of cases. In this setting, however, radiation therapy should be administered at high doses and through extended mediastinal and pulmonary fields. Our preceding experience with preoperative radiotherapy for hilomediastinal NSCLC and its ensuing postoperation complications helped us to avoid radiation therapy; our perplexities were also confirmed by Fowler and associates
18 and by Rush and Benfield
19 who underscored the risk of chemoradiotherapy in a preoperative setting. On the other hand, the toxicity, response rate, resectability, and survival in our study are comparable to those reported in the SWOG trial
6,7 in which chemoradiotherapy was used. We reduced the cumulative doses of the drugs in 30 patients, but the remaining 27 patients tolerated the full regimen well. Our recommendation for the current clinical practice, before the efficacy of new protocols is proved, is therefore to judiciously use the MVP regimen. Outside of clinical trials, however, this regimen can be used with more flexibility concerning the doses and timing of administration.
Previous studies have grouped all stage IIIB tumors on the basis of their known poor prognosis and because this category of the disease of these patients is uniformly considered inoperable or unresectable. In this case, "inoperable" suggests the concept of systemic tumor involvement (eg, N3), and "unresectable" indicates simply the technical impossibility to remove the neoplasm. We elected to perform an operation in only those patients with locally infiltrative T4 tumors because this presentation of disease represents mainly an operative problem. In fact, the tumor is often unresectable, but (at least temporarily) it tends to expand locally without systemic spread.
8,10 This clinical behavior may recall the attitude of T3 tumors involving the chest wall and thus further underscore the importance of complete resection. In selected patients with T4 tumors that involve the carina, surgical resection is indeed the treatment of choice.
20 Also, occasional patients have been treated successfully by the resection of mediastinal organs, especially the SVC,
21-23 aortic arch,
21 vertebral column,
24 and main pulmonary artery.
25 Still, a few patients can benefit from these procedures, mainly because of the technical impossibility to do so. Our goal was to explore the possibility of converting unresectable T4 tumors into resectable tumors and record the outcome of the tumors in these patients.
Accurate staging before induction therapy is crucial to discriminate between T3 and T4.
26 Clinical and bronchoscopic confirmation of T4 is unquestionable and uniformly accepted
6,7although CT and MR imaging, mediastinoscopy, thoracoscopy, and thoracotomy each have pros and cons that require special consideration. Radiologic imaging is associated with a potential margin of error. We have studied mediastinal infiltration by CT with intraoperative controls since 1981
27 and have acquired a large direct experience in the field. Ten patients in our group were staged radiologically: one patient did not undergo an operation for tumor progression, and another patient did not undergo an operation because of toxicity. For the 8 patients (19% of those undergoing operation) who underwent an operation, Table IV demonstrates that signs of previous or permanent infiltration of the mediastinum were actually present at the operation. Also, 8 of 10 patients underwent mediastinoscopy, which proved positive in 4 patients. The latter approach was accepted as a T4 staging method in other studies
6,7; however, mediastinoscopy might be a source of incertitude as well, because it can hardly discriminate between extracapsular N2 and primary tumor infiltration. Thoracoscopy might also suffer to some extent from interoperator discrepancies because of the limited view field, the impossibility to directly palpate the tissues, and the risk of dissecting the lung and mediastinum. Although we were satisfied with the use of thoracoscopy in this setting,
12 theoretically some tumors could be downstaged to T3 by a more aggressive (though dangerous) dissection. In this study, we have made all efforts to be rigorous with the staging. Therefore CT imaging was accepted only in selected cases; otherwise thoracoscopy was performed. On the basis of our experience, we would now suggest that, in experienced hands, CT could be more often accepted for the diagnosis of T4. As far as thoracotomy is concerned, we do not consider it acceptable as a staging method. Furthermore, if positive evidence of T4 must be acquired by this technique, that should occur only after thoracoscopy proved inconclusive, thus demonstrating that the case is a particularly difficult one. The surgeon is therefore expected to accept for his or her patient and for him or herself a long-lasting, difficult, and dangerous operation.
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Toxicity, morbidity, and death related to the protocol do not differ from what has been extensively reported for chemotherapy-alone induction protocols.
3,4 We reduced the total dose of mitomycin in 23 patients. One patient was removed from the study because of mitomycin-induced toxicity, and one patient, who is alive and free from tumor 50 months after the operation, has a stabilized form of interstitial lung disease. Our toxicity-related mortality rate of 7% does not exceed that reported in studies on chemoradiotherapy (10%).
6,7 Also, the complete resection rate in our study is in line with the reports of Faber and associates
2 (85%), Martini and colleagues
4 (65%), and Rush and coworkers
7 (83%). We want to point out, however, that most tumors in our series were technically unresectable before induction therapy, and this furthermore emphasizes the efficacy of preoperative chemotherapy.
Surgical difficulties after induction chemotherapy have been uniformly reported. In more than 50% of our patients who underwent resection, the procedure was complicated by the excision of hilar or mediastinal organs; in the remaining cases, a standard lobectomy or pneumonectomy could be carried out only after accurate and difficult dissection. It seems that in our series more reconstructive and "complex" procedures occurred in comparison with other studies. First, we tend to attribute this fact to our preference for bronchovascular reconstructive procedures as opposed to pneumonectomy. Also, we had the impression that lesser resections, such as sleeve lobectomy, could be accomplished because of induction therapy. Second, most studies on induction chemotherapy were based on N2 lesions, which may be not so locally infiltrative as T4. There is general agreement that the lung parenchyma should be spared at all costs and that the clinical course of these patients is often difficult. We believe that surgical judgment and perioperative care rather than technical ability is the key factor in this setting. Of 23 patients who died of cancer after an operation, 14 patients (60%) had distant metastases and only 7 patients (30%) had local recurrence. We interpret this data as a confirmation of the efficacy of induction chemotherapy in the local control of NSCLC. Survival is promising for the entire surgical group but still disappointing for patients either whose disease remained inoperable or who had incomplete resection or N2 disease. However, in the N2 group some patients survived more than 3 or 4 years; we infer that if more effective chemotherapy regimens will become available, probably also this subset could benefit from resection. Central airway involvement is an interesting feature within the T4 stage, because it can be easily and reliably monitored noninvasively. About one half of our patients did not respond to the induction regimen, and the other half had an operation. Two of the patients in the latter group are free of disease after 18 and 34 months. This suggests that although the overall outcome is not optimistic, downstaging of central airway disease can be achieved and cure is possible.
We conclude that, in patients with T4 lesions who underwent induction chemotherapy, it is reasonable to attempt resection. The complete resectability rate in our group was 63% (including patients who did not undergo an operation), a rate significantly higher than that reported in patients treated by primary surgery.810 Four patients had major toxicity from the induction regimen (7%), and 3 patients died of treatment-related causes (5.2%). Four-year survival is 19.5% for the entire group and 25.9% for those undergoing an operation. Our data indicate that induction chemotherapy is effective for downstaging and surgical reconversion of centrally located, unresectable T4 NSCLC. Toxicity, morbidity, and mortality rates are acceptable; survival is promising, but it remains to be confirmed in larger series of patients and phase III trials.
| Appendix: Discussion |
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I would like to caution those in the audience who have just heard this program of neoadjuvant chemotherapy, that it is a rigorous treatment protocol. One hundred and twenty milligrams of cisplatin per meter square can be difficult for the patient to tolerate the total dose, and mitomycin is associated with an increased incidence of pulmonary fibrosis and pulmonary complications after a surgical procedure. It is noted in your series that 30 patients had their total dosages modified and that a second group of patients received only 2 cycles with a decrease in the amount of drugs given. With your reported modifications, would you now recommend the same drug protocol, or due to toxicity associated with this vigorous program, would you now modify the recommended drug dosages?
It is noted that this neoadjuvant program has sterilized 7% of the tumors that were resected. Previous reports of neoadjuvant programs that use chemotherapy in combination with radiation report a sterilization rate of 18% to 20%, although the tumors may not be as clinically advanced as those in your series. Would this decreased incidence of tumor sterilization in the resected specimens alter your thinking concerning the use of radiation in combination with chemotherapy in the treatment of this group of patients?
Staging was accomplished by thoracoscopy in 20 patients, and I would question its use in clinical staging. It requires an additional anesthetic and procedure and may well disturb mediastinal tissue planes with possible seeding of tumor from biopsy sites. It was stated in the article that your group has had a great deal of experience with the CT scan and MR imaging in staging, and with the addition of the PET scan and mediastinoscopy, precise clinical staging could be accomplished without thoracoscopy. Would you recommend continuation of thoracoscopic clinical staging?
Another question relates to the concept of downstaging T4 disease. In other words, if there is viable tumor in the mainstem bronchus, can you convert a probable pneumonectomy to a standard lobectomy or sleeve lobectomy by neoadjuvant chemotherapy? Down staging also relates to mediastinal lymph nodes. In your series, did you convert any positive N2 lymph nodes to N0, as determined by surgical/pathological staging? This finding would further substantiate the efficacy of your neoadjuvant chemotherapeutic protocol.
The described postoperative adjuvant therapeutic program had variability, and specific indications were not provided in the article. Some patients with positive margins and/or positive nodes received radiation; some received chemotherapy, and some received both. Could you provide us with specific recommendations for postoperative adjuvant therapy, and is this type of therapy associated with any toxic manifestations?
The survival curve indicates that the patients with N0 disease had very good survival, while those with N1 and N2 disease did not do as well. With the poor results achieved in the group of patients with T4 N2 disease, would you now recommend routine mediastinoscopy in all patients submitted to this protocol? What is your definitive recommendation in a patient clinically staged with a T4 N2 disease? Should such a patient be submitted to neoadjuvant therapy followed by attempted surgical resection?
Dr Rendina. Indeed what you pointed out about the toxicity of our induction therapy regimen is true. Over one half of our patients had to undergo a modification of the chemotherapy regimen despite the absence of radiotherapy in the protocol. Two of the 4 patients who could not undergo an operation because of the toxic side effects of chemotherapy had nephrotoxicity. One other patient had multiple infections associated with neutropenia, and in the fourth patient interstitial lung disease occurred. We closed our study in 1996 also because the MVP regimen that we had been using was probably no more the best option for our patients. A protocol including platinum and gemcitabine would probably be more effective and less toxic, and we have it currently under investigation at our institution.
As far as sterilization of tumor is concerned, its rate is indeed lower in our group of patients than that obtained by other regimens. However, the sterilization rate per se does not necessarily translate into an increased complete resection rate and better long-term survival for the whole study group. What probably is more meaningful is the 63% overall complete resection rate that we report; these data parallel the 85% complete resection rate in the group of patients who underwent an operation. We believe this is the data to look at, especially in the setting of direct mediastinal tumor infiltration.
Staging is a very important issue in this setting, and we think that CT and MR imaging are dependable in many cases. Since 1981 we review in our department all CT images of our patients with lung cancer, comparing the images accurately with the intraoperative findings. With all due respect to the radiologists, I think that this probably gives us a better idea of the cleavage planes and tumor infiltration pattern, thus allowing for better interpretation of successive cases. Twenty patients underwent staging by video-assisted thoracoscopy. I agree with you that this is a questionable choice, and we have commented on our reasons for doing so in our article. All in all, we have used VATS in those cases where we were not 100% sure of the CT imaging, and retrospectively we found out that CT was very accurate in many patients. If clinical studies have to be pursued in the field of infiltrative, centrally located NSCLC, there is no doubt that one important point would be to establish precise staging guidelines to be followed by all investigators.
In our group, 38 patients underwent mediastinoscopy, and in another 7 patients evidence of N2 disease was acquired by VATS. Mediastinoscopy is an excellent tool for the staging of N2 disease, but I would not say the same for T4. It is impossible by mediastinoscopy to discriminate between extracapsular nodal infiltration and infiltration by direct extension of the primary lung tumor. PET scanning seems promising in this setting, but it is not yet available at our institution, and we have no direct experience with this technique.
In our series, we observed a number of lesions that displayed endobronchial growth at the onset of disease. Patients who were diagnosed endoscopically to have infiltration of either the carina or the main stem bronchus and in whom the tumor shrunk were treated according to the result of frozen sections. Sleeve pneumonectomy or pneumonectomy were avoided in favor of sleeve lobectomy whenever possible. We have done that in several cases, and we have experienced no local recurrence in the airway so far.
One of the slides showed that, indeed, 34 patients who had N2 disease at the onset were downstaged to N1 or N0 at the operation. This is probably a good result per se, but the survival of these patients is still disappointing.
The issue of postoperative therapy is, as you most correctly pointed out, a controversial one. We started our study in 1990 with the idea of the administering adjuvant therapy to all patients who either did not have a complete resection or who had pathologic N1 and N2 disease. We have found, however, that it is difficult to administer postoperative adjuvant therapy on a regular basis in these patients, because their general conditions might be too compromised to safely allow it. Although we do not have specific data, we have had the impression that postoperative therapy does not appear to influence survival.
Dr Walter Weder (Zurich, Switzerland). What is your operative strategy after neoadjuvant chemotherapy if you have a major response? When do you perform a minor resection, and based on what analysis do you decide?
Dr Rendina. Intraoperative frozen sections are of first importance because the operative field is difficult to interpret macroscopically after induction therapy. We have noticed that instead of being a guide toward a more extended resection, frozen sections have been a guide to restrict and limit the resection. There were many patients in our series in whom either the SVC or the adventitia of the aorta seemed infiltrated by tumor. We then realized by frozen sections that there was no tumor infiltration but simple reactive tissue, which could be left in place. This, of course, also applies to the resection of the bronchus and pulmonary artery.
Dr Carlos Saldarriaga (Medellin, Colombia). Did you do muscle transposition for the bronchial stump in all patients?
Dr Rendina. When we are planning to perform a sleeve resection, which happens as Dr Faber pointed out earlier, when one major bronchus was infiltrated before induction therapy, we take down the intercostal muscle to wrap the anastomosis at the end of the procedure.
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