Adjuvant chemotherapy can benefit the survival of stage I lung adenocarcinoma patients with tumour spread through air spaces after resection: Propensity-score matched analysis

Background It is still unclear whether stage I lung adenocarcinoma patients with tumour spread through air spaces (STAS) can benefit from postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) after lobectomy. This study investigated the effect of ACT on the postoperative survival of patients with stage I (STAS...

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Published inFrontiers in oncology Vol. 12; p. 905958
Main Authors Xie, Shaonan, Liu, Qingyi, Han, Yaqing, Wang, Shize, Deng, Huiyan, Liu, Guangjie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 16.08.2022
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Summary:Background It is still unclear whether stage I lung adenocarcinoma patients with tumour spread through air spaces (STAS) can benefit from postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy (ACT) after lobectomy. This study investigated the effect of ACT on the postoperative survival of patients with stage I (STAS + ) lung adenocarcinoma. Methods We retrospectively analysed the clinical data of stage I (STAS + ) invasive lung adenocarcinoma patients who underwent lobectomy in the Department of Thoracic Surgery of our hospital from January 1, 2013 to January 1, 2016. Propensity score matching (PSM) was performed to group patients to investigate whether ACT could lead to better prognosis of patients. Results A total of 593 patients with stage I (STAS + ) lung adenocarcinoma were enrolled. The study after PSM included 406 patients. Kaplan–Meier survival analysis showed the experimental group had a better 3-year recurrence-free survival (RFS) rate ( p = 0.037) and the 5-year RFS rate ( p = 0.022) than the control group. It also had higher 5-year overall survival ( p = 0.017). The multivariate analysis by Cox proportional hazard regression model showed that stage I STAS + lung adenocarcinoma patients with lymphatic vessel invasion (HR: 1.711, 95% CI: 1.052-2.784; p = 0.045), vascular invasion (HR: 5.014, 95% CI: 3.154-7.969; p < 0.001), and visceral pleural invasion (HR: 2.086, 95% CI: 1.162-3.743; p = 0.014), and without ACT (HR: 1.675, 95% CI: 1.043-2.689; p = 0.033) had a significant survival disadvantage. Conclusion ACT can boost the postoperative survival of patients with stage I (STAS + ) lung adenocarcinoma.
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Edited by: Jun Zhang, University of Kansas Medical Center, United States
Reviewed by: Paul Emile Van Schil, Antwerp University Hospital, Belgium; Lanwei Guo, Henan Provincial Cancer Hospital, China; Lingbin Du, Zhejiang Cancer Hospital, China
This article was submitted to Thoracic Oncology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Oncology
ISSN:2234-943X
2234-943X
DOI:10.3389/fonc.2022.905958