Hans Blaauwgeers

48 Chapter 4 Abstract Objective The objective was to study outcomes in patients in a population registry who were surgically staged as having pT3N0 NSCLC according to the seventh and eight editions of the TNM staging classification. Methods Details of patients who underwent surgery for NSCLC staged as pT3N0M0 from 2010 to 2013 on the basis of the seventh edition of the TNM classification were retrieved from the Netherlands Comprehensive Cancer Organization. These data were next matched with corresponding pathology data from a nationwide registry. Patients were categorized into four major pT3 subgroups as follows: those with a tumor diameter more than 7 cm, those with separate tumor nodules in the same lobe (two or more nodules), those with parietal pleural invasion, and a mixed group (consisting mainly of those with a tumor diameter larger than 7 cm combined with parietal pleural invasion). Results A total of 683 patients were eligible for analysis. The 3- and 5-year overall survival (OS) rates for the subtype tumor diameter larger than 7 cm were 59.9% and 47.2%, respectively, and were comparable to the rates for the subtype with pleural invasion (50.4% and 45.3%), respectively. The mixed group has worse 3- and 5-year OS rates (37.5% and 28.7%, respectively), which were comparable to the outcomes for TNM eighth edition–staged IIIB and pT4 cases in the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer database. For the subtype two or more nodules, the 3- and 5-year OS rates were 70.6% and 62.8%, respectively, with patients with adenocarcinoma showing a significantly better OS than did patients with squamous cell carcinoma: a 5-year OS rate of 65.1% versus 47.2%, respectively (p < 0.001), suggesting that the prognosis for the adenocarcinoma subgroup may be comparable to that for the pT2 category, whereas squamous cell carcinoma nodules can remain pT3. Conclusion This population analysis of overall survival rate by pT3N0 subcategory for NSCLC suggests that histologic type is a relevant descriptor in the category two or more nodules. The findings do not support migration of the group with a tumor diameter larger than 7 cm to the category pT4 in the eighth edition of the TNM classification, and they suggest that a combination of two pT3 descriptors (the mixed groups) merits migration to pT4.

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