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Ann Thorac Surg 1999;68:227-231
© 1999 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons
a Department of Thoracic Surgery, Marie Lannelongue Hospital, Le Plessis Robinson, France
b Department of Pathology, Marie Lannelongue Hospital, Le Plessis Robinson, France
Address reprint requests to Dr Régnard, Service de Chirurgie Thoracique, Centre Chirurgical Marie Lannelongue, 133 avenue de la résistance, Le Plessis Robinson 92350, France
| Abstract |
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Methods. In a 24-year period, we performed 20 complete resections and three exploratory thoracotomies only for primary lung sarcomas. One patient declined operation. Mean diameter of resected tumors was 9 cm (range, 4 to 18 cm). There were eight stage IB, eight stage IIB, one stage IIIA, and three stage IIIB. Sixty percent of patients with resected tumors received adjuvant therapy. Age, sex, resectability, tumor size, histologic cell type, stage, and adjuvant therapy were analyzed as predictors of survival.
Results. No postoperative deaths occurred. All 4 patients who had no resection died within 15 months. The 5- and 10-year actuarial survival after complete resection was 48%. The 5- and 10-year actuarial survival in stage IB was 83%, whereas the 4-year actuarial survival in stage IIB was 30% (p < 0.05). Complete resection and stage of disease were the sole significant prognostic factors.
Conclusions. Complete resection of primary sarcoma of the lung, when feasible, can achieve prolonged survival, although almost half of the patients died of metastasis within 2 years of operation. Adjuvant therapy needs to be investigated.
| Introduction |
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| Patients and methods |
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Treatment
One patient declined operation, despite a relatively localized tumor (patient 3, Table 1), and 23 patients were operated on. Exploratory thoracotomy only was the sole available procedure in 3 patients because of extensive mediastinal invasion precluding resection. Twenty patients (83%) had complete resection of their tumors (Table 1). These resections included 13 lobectomies with extension to the chest wall in six cases and to the pericardium and the phrenic nerve in one case, and seven pneumonectomies with extension to the pericardium in five cases, and to the left atrium in one case. Twelve of the 20 (60%) patients who had complete resection received adjuvant therapy (radiotherapy in 5 patients, chemotherapy in 5, both treatments in 2).
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Tumors were scored in three grades according to the classification of the French Federation of Cancer Centers, reported by Coindre and associates [8], with the score based on tumor differentiation, mitosis count, and necrosis. No tumors were scored in grade 1, and 20 tumors were classified in the highest grade of malignancy, ie, grade III, and four in grade II.
According to the recently revised TNM classification for lung cancers [9], the 20 resected tumors were classified as follows: eight stage IB (eight T2N0), eight stage IIB (seven T3N0, one T2N1), one stage IIIA (one T3N2), and 3 stage IIIB (two T4N1, one T4N2).
Statistical analysis
All patients were followed up either until death or the completion of the study (May 1998). All deaths were attributed to malignancy. Sex, age, resectability, tumor size (less than or greater than 5 cm), histologic cell type, stage, and adjuvant treatment were analyzed as predictors of survival. Survival rates were obtained according to the actuarial method derived from the Kaplan-Meier method [10], and survival differences between subgroups were compared with the log-rank test. A p value less than 0.05 was considered to be significant.
| Results |
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| Comment |
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As indicated by Burt and Zakowski [13], prior to 1975 the descriptions of patients with primary sarcoma of the lung were confusing because they included the lymphoproliferative disorders, as in Hochberg and Crastnopols report [14], which included 34% lymphomas. However, since 1931, at least 221 true primary lung sarcomas have been reported, generally as case reports [13]. One of the largest series came from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, in which 32 primary sarcomas of the lung were reported in 1972 [2]. More recently, three series [46] reported 18, 42, and 22 patients with primary lung sarcomas, respectively, collected during periods of 28 years, 62 years, and 32 years, respectively (Table 2). As most malignant mesenchymal tumors of the lung are secondary metastases, a solitary sarcoma of the lung should be considered as primary only if thorough investigation failed to discover a primary lesion elsewhere, metastasizing to the lung through the hematogenous route. However, as emphasized by Nascimento and colleagues [4], most metastatic sarcomas are usually expressed in the lung as multiple nodules, and extrathoracic sarcomas seldom are occult.
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In contrast with other series [2, 46], we had no patients with small size sarcomas limited to the endobronchial lumen; those lesions are known to have a better prognosis with generally a good outcome and rare metastases than larger intraparenchymal sarcomas [2, 6, 12]. The smallest tumor size in our series was 4 cm (two cases). In contrast, 28% (5 of 18) of the patients in the series of Nascimento and colleagues [4] had tumors 4 cm or less, and the median diameter of tumor was 4 cm (range, 1.5 to 20 cm) in the series of Janssen and colleagues [6].
In contrast also to the findings of MacCormack and Martini [5], who noted pulmonary sarcoma metastases by the bloodstream but rarely by the lymphatic system, we found that nodal involvement was not so rare, with 25% (five of 20) of our operated cases having positive nodes.
Resectability and survival
Resection is the best option when possible. We obtained a high rate of complete resection (83%) despite a high frequency of large tumors (Table 2). The fact that only 1 patient in our series had a local recurrence led us to believe that we had achieved complete resection of tumors with adequacy in most cases. In our series, the 5- and 10-year actuarial survival after complete resection was 48%. MacCormack and Martini [5] reported a 69% rate of resection with 36% of those patients alive at 5 years. Janssen and colleagues [6] reported a 50% rate of complete resection with 64% of these patients (seven of 11) alive at a mean follow-up time of 13.5 years (range, 3 to 25 years).
The present study showed that the prognostic influence of the American Joint Committee on Cancer/Union International Contre le Cancer (AJCC/UICC) staging system for lung cancers when applied to primary pulmonary sarcomas. The 5-year actuarial survival rate was 83% in stage IB, which is significantly better than survival for more advanced stages of disease. We found that the influence of the tumor extent was dominant in comparison with the influence of the nodal status, however, only 5 patients in this series had positive nodes, which makes difficult any comparison.
The survival of patients who were deemed inoperable or who did not undergo resection was poor, with all of them dying within 2 years, in our series and others [5, 6]. In the study by MacCormack and Martini [5], radiation therapy had no effect on survival. In cases of incomplete resection, whether adjuvant therapy prolongs survival remains questionable. Multiple drug therapy was attempted in incomplete resection by Janssen and colleagues [6], with rare prolonged survival.
Prognostic factors
Size
In our series, because no tumor was less than 4 cm, a size which has been of prognostic value in the literature [6], we could not study the influence of this factor. However, we did not find any difference in survival between patients with sarcomas less than or greater than 5 cm in diameter. The influence of the size on prognostic has been debated. For MacCormack and Martini [5], size (less than or greater 5 cm) did not influence survival (p = 0.2), whereas sizes larger than 4 cm for Janssen and colleagues [6] and larger than 5 cm for Nascimento and associates [4] indicated poor prognosis. In the series of Nascimento and associates [4], all 11 patients with sarcomas of 5 cm or larger died, most of them with intrathoracic recurrence, and in the series of Janssen and colleagues [6], the median survival for patients with tumors larger than 4 cm was only 23 months.
Grade
In our study, most tumors were high-grade malignancies, unlike sarcomas occurring in other sites. Because none of our patients had a low-grade sarcoma, with no cases of small and limited endobronchial form, we could not study the influence of tumor grade. In the literature [6, 12, 13], sarcomas with low-grade malignancy have been considered to have a better prognosis than those with a higher grade. Although no large series of small and limited endobronchial tumors has been reported, it seems that these tumors, which are generally easy to resect radically, correlate with low grade and with long-term survival [2, 4]. However, in our study, unlike other sarcoma sites, low- versus high-grade malignancy did not play such an important part in the prognostic factors.
Histologic form
Similar to other studies [1, 2, 46], we did not find any prognostic significance from the histologic type of sarcoma, but because of the small number of patients in all series and the difficulties in arranging subgroups, we must be careful before jumping to definitive conclusions.
Finally, in our experience, only complete resection and low stage of primary lung sarcoma favorably influenced survival. Because almost half the patients we treated died of metastasis within 2 years of operation, multiple drug therapy needs to be investigated for improving survival.
| References |
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