Title: Case Discussion (lung cancer)
1 Case Discussion (lung cancer)
- Pinar Çelik
- TTS 15. Annual Congress
- 11-15 April 2012
- Antalya
2Conflict of interest
- I dont have any conflict of interest
3Synchronous lung cancer is determination of
second primary lung cancer in a patient with lung
cancer at diagnosis.
4Synchronous lung cancer
- Occurance rate 0.8 - 14.5
- 5-year survival rate 0-76
- Reasons of difference in survival Difficulties
in diagnosis, BAC, inclusion of patients with
carcinoid tumours and satellite noduls, few
cases, second tumour is metastatic
5Synchronous lung cancer
- If the tumours histological types are different
it is separate primary lung cancers - If the tumours histological types are same
- One of them is primary, other one is
metastase - Synchronous lung cancer
6Martini-Melamed criteria
- 1. Tumours should be located distantly and
separately - 2. Histological types
- a. Different histology
- b. If same histology
- They should be located at different segment,
lobe or lung and - Originated from carcinoma insitu
- No presence of carcinoma at shared lymphatic
drainage - No extrapulmonary metastases at the diagnosis
Martini N, Melamed MR. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
1975
7Antakli criteria
- 1. Different histology
- 2. Same histology with two or more of the
following - a. Anatomically distinct
- b. Associated premalignant lesion
- c. No systemic metastases
- d. No mediastinal lymph node spread
- e. Different DNA ploidy
Antakli T. et al. Ann Thorac Surg 1995
8Staging ?
- There is no specific staging at synchronous lung
cancer (TNM) - Staging of each tumour should be done separately,
advanced one should be recorded. - Synchronous lung cancers was not discussed at
last staging, their assessment was done as
metastases of each other.
Pastorina U. Eur J Cancer 200137 75-90
9Staging
- When the synchronous lung cancer diagnosis is
done distant metastases assessment and
mediastineal staging should be done - Mediastinal metastases should be proved
invasively - Cranial MR should be seen
- PET-CT should be done
- Pulmonary capacity should be evaluated
Detterbeck FC, Jones DR et al. Chest 2003 Bury T.
et al. Eur Resp J 1997
10PET-CT
- Standardized PET-CT has not true positive or
negative rates in patients with nodule lt1 cm - Spatial resolution of PET-CT is 6-8 mm
- PET-CT is not reliable in patients with lesion
located at lower zone - Duration of shot is longer than spiral CT
- Respiratory artefact
Allen-Auerbach M, Yeom K, Park J. et al. J Nucl
Med. 2006
11Staging (case)
- Evaluation of distant metastases and mediastinal
staging was done with PET-CT - Pulmonary capacity of patient was evaluated
- Invasive staging was not done
- Lesion at contralateral lung was not clarified at
diagnosis (synchronous lung cancer, metastases,
benign lesion?)
12Thorax CT(case)
A 40x25 mm lobulated, pleura based lesion with
malignant nature located at apical segment of
upper lobe of right lung was seen. Invasion to
chest wall or ribs was not observed. There was
no mediastinal, hilar or axillary pathological
lymphadenopathy.
13Thorax CT(case)
A 17x13 mm lesion with irregular border located
at laterobasal segment of lower lobe of left lung
was seen. This lesion was causing retraction at
major fissure. A 8 mm subpleural nodule at
laterobasal segment of lower lob of left lung was
seen.
14PET-CT (case)
- A pleura based lesion located at apical segment
and posteromedial of posterior segment of upper
lob of right lung was including posterolateral of
right 3.rib (local invasion). The central of
lesion was hypometabolic, border of lesion was
hypermetabolic (SUV max 6.1), - There was diffuse increase at right shoulder
joint and muscle (SUV max 3.2), linear increase
in sternum (SUV max 3.3). - SUV value of nodule and mass located at lower
lobe of left lung was not mentioned, probable due
to low FDG value.
15PET-CT (case)
- A pleura based lesion located at apical segment
and posteromedial of posterior segment of upper
lob of right lung was including posterolateral of
right 3.rib (local invasion). The central of
lesion was hypometabolic, border of lesion was
hypermetabolic (SUV max 6.1) (Malign lesion) - There was diffuse increase at right shoulder
joint and muscle (SUV max 3.2), linear increase
in sternum (SUV max 3.3) (degeneration and
by-pass) - SUV value of nodule and mass located at lower
lobe of left lung was not mentioned, probable due
to low FDG value.
- Shreve PD, Anzai Y, Wahl RL. Radiographics 1999
- Sarji SA. Biomed Imaging Interv J 2006
- Prabhakar HB, Sahani Dv et al. Radiographics 2007
-
16Which lesion firstly operated?
- In bilateral synchronous lung cancers,
thoracotomy should be done to the one which has
more advanced stage. - In bilateral synchronous lung cancers, if one of
the tumours has definite diagnosis and the other
one has no histopathological diagnosis,
thoracotomy should be done to the one which has
no histopathological diagnosis.
- Kocaturk CI, Gunluoglu MZ, Cansever L. et al. Eur
J Cardiothorac Surg 2010, Ferguson MK et al. J
Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1985
17Surgery and treatment(case)
- Right lung was oparated (the one has advanced
stage, but lesion at left lung did not have
diagnosis). - Surgery Partial resection of right 2-3-4
ribsright upper lobectomyMLND - Postoperation pathology (pStageT3N0M0)
- Tumour exceeded visceral and parietal pleura and
invaded to ribs. - Tumour smooth tissue was close to the surgery
border but ther was no continuity. - Postoperation RT was applied
- Adjuvant KT?
- Follow up (3 month interval)
18 Chest wall invasion (T3N0M0)
- Total resection
-
- Only parietal pleura invasion exstrapleural
resection - More deeper invasions en block resection
- MLND
- Surgical border negative ? no need for
postoperative RT - Surgical border positive ? postoperative RT
-
19Thorax CT (9. month of follow up)
- At the bronchial stubby location,
residual-recurrent mass was observed. - A 19x13 mm lesion with irregular border located
at laterobasal segment of lower lobe of left lung
was seen. This lesion was causing retraction at
major fissure and had malignant nature. With the
comparison of previous CT , there was minimal
increase in dimension, evident increase in
density of mass. - Also 8.5x6.5 mm stable subpleural nodule at
laterobasal segment of lower lob of left lung was
seen.
20PET-CT (9.month of follow up)
- Increase in F-18 FDG at fibrotic area located at
apical segment of upper lobe of right lung (SUV
max 2.7). - Moderate increase in F-18 FDG at 15.3x15.6 mm
irregular lesion that was located at laterobasal
segment of lower lobe of left lung (SUV max 2.2)
and increase in SUV max value of this lesion was
observed at respiratory gating imaging af late
phase (SUV max 3.0). - At rectosigmiod junction focal invrease in
activity (SUV max 3.0).
21PET-CT ( 9. month of follow up)
22PET-CT (9.month of follow up)
- Increase in F-18 FDG at fibrotic area located at
apical segment of upper lobe of right lung (SUV
max 2.7) (RT) - Moderate increase in F-18 FDG at 15.3x15.6 mm
irregular lesion that was located at laterobasal
segment of lower lobe of left lung (SUV max 2.2)
and increase in SUV max value of this lesion was
observed at respiratory gating imaging af late
phase (SUV max 3.0) (malign lesion) - At rectosigmiod junction focal increase in
activity (SUV max 3.0). (GIS N uptake or malign
lesion)
- Shreve PD, Anzai Y, Wahl RL. Radiographics 1999
- Sarji SA. Biomed Imaging Interv J 2006
- Prabhakar HB, Sahani Dv et al. Radiographics 2007
-
23ACCP Recommendations
- In patients who have two synchronous primary
NSCLCs and are being considered for curative
surgical resection, invasive mediastinal staging
and extrathoracic imaging (head CT/MRI plus
either whole-body PET or abdominal CT plus bone
scan) are recommended. Involvement of mediastinal
nodes and/or metastatic disease represents a
contraindication to resection (1C). - In patients suspected of having two synchronous
primary NSCLCs, a thorough search for an
extrathoracic primary cancer to rule out the
possibility that both of the lung lesions
represent metastases is recommended (1C). - In patients (not suspected of having a second
focus of cancer) who are found intraoperatively
to have a second cancer in a different lobe,
resection of each lesion is recommended, provided
that the patient has adequate pulmonary reserve
and there is no N2 nodal involvement (1C).
Shen KR, Meyers BF, Larner JM et al. ACCP
evidence-based clinical practice guidelines.
Chest 2007 Suppl
24Surgical approach to bilateral synchronous lung
cancer
Kocaturk CI, Gunluoglu MZ, Cansever L et al. Eur
J Cardiothorac Surg 2010
25Surgical approach to unilateral synchronous lung
cancer
Kocaturk CI, Gunluoglu MZ, Cansever L et al. Eur
J Cardiothorac Surg 2010
26Diagnosis and treatment (case)
- 1. Moderate differantial squamous cell carcinoma
- Right upper lobectomypartial resection of right
2-3-4 ribsMLND - Postoperative RT was given, KT was not.
- 2. Synchronous tumour, adenocarcinoma mix type
after 9 month later - Resected with wide surgery border, not added to
lobectomy, postoperative RT or KT were not given.
27Survival
- Between 2001 and 2008, survival analysis of 26
consecutive patients diagnosed with synchronous
lung cancer - 5 year survival 49.7
- Unilateral 40.6
- Bilateral 62.8
- Prognostic factors
- Pneumonectomy bad
- Adjuvant KT good
Kocaturk CI, Gunluoglu MZ, Cansever L et al. Eur
J Cardiothorac Surg 2010
28Survival
- Between 2001-2008 years survival analysis of
multicentered 6 study that include 467 patient
applied curative resection due to synchronous
multiplelung cancers - Mean survival was 52 month, postoperative
mortality 1.9 - Prognostic factors
- Age
- Male gender
- N1, N2
- Unilateral tumours
- Different histopathological type, increase
mortality
Tanvetyanon HT, Finley DJ, Fabian T, Voltolini L,
Kocaturk CI, Fulp WJ et al. ASCO 2012
29Prognosis (case)
- Good prognostic factors
- Bilateral tumours
- No presence of N1, N2
- Complete resection
- Pneumonectomy was not done
- Bad prognostic factors
- Male gender
- Different histology
- KT was not given
30Thank you
31Metachronous lung cancer is new lung cancer
development after curative surgery due to primary
lung cancer.
32Metachronous lung cancer
- Different histopathology
- If the tumours histopathology is same
- Disease free duration more than 2 years (ACCP 4
years) - Originated from carcinoma in situ
- Location of second cancer at different lobe or
lung - No presence of carcinoma at shared lymphatic
drainage - No extrapulmonary metastases at the diagnosis
Martini N, Melamed MR. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
1975 Shen KR, Meyers BF et al. ACCP
evidence-based clinical practice guidelines.
Chest. 2007 Suppl
33Metachronous lung cancer
- Different histology
- Same histology with two or more of the following
- Anatomically distinct
- Associated premalignant lesion
- No systemic metastases
- No mediastinal lymph node spread
- Different DNA ploidy
Antakli T. An Thorac Surg 1995
34ACCP recommendation
- In patients who have a metachronous NSCLC and are
being considered for curative surgical resection,
invasive mediastinal staging and extrathoracic
imaging (head CT/MRI plus either whole-body PET
or abdominal CT plus bone scan) are recommended. - Involvement of mediastinal nodes and/or
metastatic disease represents a contraindication
to resection (1C).
Shen KR, Meyers BF et al. ACCP evidence-based
clinical practice guidelines. Chest. 2007 Suppl
35Treatment
- Treatment of metachronous lung cancer is complete
resection like primary lung cancer. - Presence of mediastinal and distant metastases
shold be looked before surgical treatment. - Patient respiratory capacity determines the
surgical procedure. - If lobectomy or segmentectomy was done for
primary lung cacer before, complementary
pneumonectomy can be done for tumours located
same side. - If right pneumonectomy was done before, only
limited resection can be applied to the left
lung.
36Survival
- 2 year survival 52
- 5 year survival 20
Antakli T et al. Ann Thorac Surg 1995 Pastorina
U. Eur J Cancer 2001.