作者
Tomohiro Miyoshi,Hiroyuki Ito,Masashi Wakabayashi,Tadayoshi Hashimoto,Yuta Sekino,Kenji Suzuki,Masahiro Tsuboi,Yasumitsu Moriya,Ichiro Yoshino,Tetsuya Isaka,Aritoshi Hattori,Takahiro Mimae,Mitsuhiro Isaka,Tomohiro Maniwa,Makoto Endoh,Hiroshige Yoshioka,Kazuo Nakagawa,Ryu Nakajima,Yasuhiro Tsutani,Hisashi Saji,Morihito Okada,Keiju Aokage,Haruhiko Fukuda,Shun‐ichi Watanabe
摘要
Abstract OBJECTIVES This study aimed to identify the risk factors for pulmonary functional deterioration after wedge resection for early-stage lung cancer with ground-glass opacity, which remain unclear, particularly in low-risk patients. METHODS We analysed 237 patients who underwent wedge resection for peripheral early-stage lung cancer in JCOG0804/WJOG4507L, a phase III, single-arm confirmatory trial. The changes in forced expiratory volume in 1 s were calculated pre- and postoperatively, and a cutoff value of −10%, the previously reported reduction rate after lobectomy, was used to divide the patients into 2 groups: the severely reduced group (≤−10%) and normal group (>−10%). These groups were compared to identify predictors for severe reduction. RESULTS Thirty-seven (16%) patients experienced severe reduction. Lesions with a total tumour size ≥1 cm were significantly more frequent in the severely reduced group than in the normal group (89.2% vs 71.5%; P = 0.024). A total tumour size of ≥1 cm [odds ratio (OR), 3.287; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.114–9.699: P = 0.031] and pleural indentation (OR, 2.474; 95% CI, 1.039–5.890: P = 0.041) were significant predictive factors in the univariable analysis. In the multivariable analysis, pleural indentation (OR, 2.667; 95% CI, 1.082–6.574; P = 0.033) was an independent predictive factor, whereas smoking status and total tumour size were marginally significant. CONCLUSIONS Of the low-risk patients who underwent pulmonary wedge resection for early-stage lung cancer, 16% experienced severe reduction in pulmonary function. Pleural indentation may be a risk factor for severely reduced pulmonary function in pulmonary wedge resection.