Margaret E Yang, Alexandra Potter, Deepti Srinivasan, Arian Mansur, Larisa Shagabayeva, Danny Wang, Chi-Fu Jeffrey Yang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Data on optimal therapy for patients with primary mediastinal germ cell tumors consist overwhelmingly of single-institution studies with small sample sizes. The objective of this study is to assess the association of survival outcomes with surgery vs non-operative management for patients with early-stage primary mediastinal germ cell tumors.
Methods: Overall survival of all patients with seminomas and non-seminomatous primary germ cell tumors in the mediastinum who received 1) chemotherapy, or 2) surgery with or without chemotherapy (referred to as 'surgery' for simplicity) for early-stage disease from 2004-2015 in the National Cancer Database was assessed using Kaplan-Meier analysis, propensity score-matched analysis, and multivariable Cox proportional hazards analysis.
Results: Among patients with seminomas, chemotherapy alone was used in 120 (80.5%) patients and surgery was used in 29 (19.5%) patients. There was no significant difference in 5-year survival between surgery and chemotherapy in unadjusted and propensity score-matched analysis. Among patients with non-seminomatous tumors, chemotherapy alone was used in 91 (46.7%) patients and surgery was used in 104 (53.3%) patients. Surgery was associated with improved 5-year survival when compared to chemotherapy in unadjusted, and multivariable-adjusted, and propensity score-matched analysis.
Conclusions: In this national analysis, multimodality treatment involving surgery was associated with improved survival when compared to chemotherapy alone for early-stage primary mediastinal non-seminomatous germ cell tumors. For seminomas of the mediastinum, chemotherapy was associated with similar long-term outcomes when compared to multimodality treatment involving surgery.
期刊介绍:
The mission of The Annals of Thoracic Surgery is to promote scholarship in cardiothoracic surgery patient care, clinical practice, research, education, and policy. As the official journal of two of the largest American associations in its specialty, this leading monthly enjoys outstanding editorial leadership and maintains rigorous selection standards.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery features:
• Full-length original articles on clinical advances, current surgical methods, and controversial topics and techniques
• New Technology articles
• Case reports
• "How-to-do-it" features
• Reviews of current literature
• Supplements on symposia
• Commentary pieces and correspondence
• CME
• Online-only case reports, "how-to-do-its", and images in cardiothoracic surgery.
An authoritative, clinically oriented, comprehensive resource, The Annals of Thoracic Surgery is committed to providing a place for all thoracic surgeons to relate experiences which will help improve patient care.