Treatment and prognosis in bronchial carcinoids involving regional lymph nodes. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • From 1953 to 1992, 25 patients were surgically treated for bronchial carcinoids with metastases to regional lymph nodes (N1 or N2). The tumors were located centrally, involving main or lobar bronchi in 12 patients and were peripheral in 13. Histologically, 12 of the carcinoids were classified as typical and 13 as atypical (neuroendocrine carcinoma). Pneumonectomy was performed in 11 patients, sleeve lobectomy in one, lobectomy in seven and bilobectomy in six. A formal mediastinal lymph node dissection was done in 20 patients. At final staging, 10 had N1 disease and 15 had N2. No adjuvant treatment was given to the 10 patients with N1 disease. External radiation therapy was given after the operation to 9 of 15 patients with N2 disease. The overall 5-year survival (Kaplan-Meier) was 75% (median 62 months). No difference in survival was found between patients with N1 or N2 disease. However, survival and recurrence rate differed between typical and atypical carcinoids. In typical carcinoids, the 5-year survival was 92% and, in atypical carcinoids, it was 60% (p = 0.02). We conclude that complete resection for bronchial carcinoids results in long-term survival despite the presence of regional lymph node metastases. Recurrence appears to depend more on cell type than nodal status. Postoperative radiation therapy does not appear to be beneficial.

publication date

  • January 1, 1994

Research

keywords

  • Bronchial Neoplasms
  • Carcinoid Tumor

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0028105778

PubMed ID

  • 8283871

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 107

issue

  • 1