IBT, if with unsuccessful rescue surgery, is justifiable with excellent long-term outcome. IBT made surgery unnecessary in 42% of the cases. Iceberg phenomenon and metastatic potential in this group of patients with bronchial carcinoids are clinically insignificant.
Initial bronchoscopic treatment is a potentially more tissue-sparing alternative than immediate surgical resection in patients with intraluminal bronchial carcinoids. For successful tumor eradication with initial bronchoscopic treatment in central carcinoids, assessment of intraluminal versus extraluminal growth may be of much more importance than histologic division between typical and atypical carcinoid. Disease-specific mortality is low, and long-term outcome has been excellent. Implementation of initial bronchoscopic treatment had no negative impact on surgical treatment outcome.
Resection rates in octogenarians are low but satisfactory postoperative mortality and acceptable survival suggest that selection criteria should be adapted. Until effective alternative treatment becomes available, surgical resection, preceded by a thorough preoperative assessment, should be considered in the "old but fit" octogenarian.
Purpose: To evaluate the role of 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in radiologically occult preinvasive lesions and lung cancer in the central airways. Experimental Design:Twenty-two patients with 24 preinvasive lesions and early squamous cell cancer (SCC) being occult on high-resolution computed tomography were studied. All lesions were diagnosed based on histology sampled using autofluorescence bronchoscopy. FDG-PET findings were correlated with WHO histologic classification. FDG-PET was considered truepositive when the final diagnosis was SCC and true-negative when the lesions were classified as severe dysplasia or less. Results: FDG-PET was true-positive in 8 of 11and true-negative in 11of 13 cases corresponding with a sensitivity of 73% [95% confidence interval (CI), 0.43-0.91] and specificity of 85% (95% CI, 0.57-0.97). Positive and negative predictive values were 80% (95% CI, 0.48-0.96) and 79% (95% CI, 0.52-0.93), respectively. Conclusions: Our very preliminary data suggest that FDG-PET might be useful for the evaluation of early central airway lesions, being positive in most SCC and negative in cases of severe dysplasia. Validation in a larger multicenter study is needed.
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