2016
DOI: 10.1093/ejcts/ezw343
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The importance of lymph node dissection accompanying wedge resection for clinical stage IA lung cancer†

Abstract: Accompanying wedge resection for lung cancer, LN sampling adds no morbidity and does not increase length of stay. Positive nodes are identified in 4.3% of patients thought eligible for wedge resection. LN removal appears to decrease locoregional recurrence and may be associated with a survival benefit.

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Cited by 32 publications
(40 citation statements)
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“…First, in terms of patient selection, sublobar resection achieves best results for stage Ia disease (with tumours smaller than 2 cm in diameter) and with lesions having a consolidation:tumour ratio on CT imaging greater than 75% (i.e., with a solid component of less than 25%) . Second, in terms of operative strategy, a lymph node dissection should be performed, and a segmentectomy is preferred over a wedge resection . In these selected patients, if such thorough sublobar surgery can be performed, sublobar resection can provide overall and cancer‐specific survival as good as conventional lobectomy …”
Section: Is Sublobar Resection Surgery the Ideal Intervention For Ggos?mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…First, in terms of patient selection, sublobar resection achieves best results for stage Ia disease (with tumours smaller than 2 cm in diameter) and with lesions having a consolidation:tumour ratio on CT imaging greater than 75% (i.e., with a solid component of less than 25%) . Second, in terms of operative strategy, a lymph node dissection should be performed, and a segmentectomy is preferred over a wedge resection . In these selected patients, if such thorough sublobar surgery can be performed, sublobar resection can provide overall and cancer‐specific survival as good as conventional lobectomy …”
Section: Is Sublobar Resection Surgery the Ideal Intervention For Ggos?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, in terms of operative strategy, a lymph node dissection should be performed, and a segmentectomy is preferred over a wedge resection . In these selected patients, if such thorough sublobar surgery can be performed, sublobar resection can provide overall and cancer‐specific survival as good as conventional lobectomy …”
Section: Is Sublobar Resection Surgery the Ideal Intervention For Ggos?mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is impossible within the remaining lobe during wedge resection and exposes wedge resections to local recurrence risk. Omission of segmental and intralobar LN retrieval might explain the high incidence of loco-regional recurrence observed after segmentectomy by Hattori and coworkers (23) and after wedge resection by Stiles and coworkers (24). Given the major impact on the prognosis of peripheral LN metastasis, the absence of intrapulmonary resection of these LNs should be a warning signal when considering local surgical therapy or local nonsurgical procedures such as stereotactic body radiation therapy.…”
Section: Peripheral Ln Dissection: Who Retrieves? Is It the Pathologimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, because of potential side effects, caution should be exercised in choosing to perform this procedure. Stiles et al [36] evaluated all patients undergoing wedge resection for peripheral clinical stage IA NSCLC, and grouped them into those with and without LN dissection. Of 196 patients undergoing wedge resection, of whom 138 (70%) had LNs (median = 4 nodes) resected and the remainder did not, there were no significant differences in the clinical or pathologic characteristics between the two groups.…”
Section: [35]mentioning
confidence: 99%