Benedikt Niedermaier, Michael Allgäuer, Thomas Muley, Marc A Schneider, Martin E Eichhorn, Hauke Winter, Laura V Klotz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Among the different subtypes of invasive lung adenocarcinoma, lepidic predominant adenocarcinoma (LPA) has been recognized as the lowest-risk subtype with good prognosis. The aim of this study is to provide insight into the heterogeneity within LPA tumors and to better understand the influence of other sub-histologies on survival outcome.
Methods: Overall, 75 consecutive patients with LPA in pathologic stage I (TNM 8th edition) who underwent resection between 2010 and 2022 were included into this retrospective, single center analysis. The proportions of different growth patterns were reported in 5% increments according to the WHO classification.
Results: All tumors exhibited a predominantly lepidic growth pattern (median proportion 70%, IQR 60%-85%). The invasive component included acinar (n = 66, 88%), papillary (n = 41, 55%), micropapillary (n = 14, 19%), and solid growth patterns (n = 4, 5%), with most tumors exhibiting more than one invasive growth pattern. The presence of high-risk growth, that is, micropapillary and solid, was associated with higher T stage (r = 0.423, p = 0.0002). A classification of patients as lepidic/high-risk or lepidic/low-risk based on the presence of micropapillary and solid growth patterns resulted in a significantly worse disease-free survival (p = 0.0169, 5-year DFS: lepidic/high-risk 73% vs. lepidic/low-risk: 95%) for the lepidic/high-risk group, while the groups did not differ in age, gender, smoking status, or extent of resection.
Conclusion: Patients with stage I LPA exhibit considerable intratumor heterogeneity regarding growth patterns, which can be used for prognostic stratification. The occurrence of micropapillary and solid growth patterns in LPA is associated with poorer disease-free survival.
期刊介绍:
Thoracic Cancer aims to facilitate international collaboration and exchange of comprehensive and cutting-edge information on basic, translational, and applied clinical research in lung cancer, esophageal cancer, mediastinal cancer, breast cancer and other thoracic malignancies. Prevention, treatment and research relevant to Asia-Pacific is a focus area, but submissions from all regions are welcomed. The editors encourage contributions relevant to prevention, general thoracic surgery, medical oncology, radiology, radiation medicine, pathology, basic cancer research, as well as epidemiological and translational studies in thoracic cancer. Thoracic Cancer is the official publication of the Chinese Society of Lung Cancer, International Chinese Society of Thoracic Surgery and is endorsed by the Korean Association for the Study of Lung Cancer and the Hong Kong Cancer Therapy Society.
The Journal publishes a range of article types including: Editorials, Invited Reviews, Mini Reviews, Original Articles, Clinical Guidelines, Technological Notes, Imaging in thoracic cancer, Meeting Reports, Case Reports, Letters to the Editor, Commentaries, and Brief Reports.