Abstract
Video-assisted mediastinoscopy or VAM-lymphadenectomy is not a standard procedure in cN1 disease http://ow.ly/dAZq30irs63
To the Editor:
We have read with great interest and welcome the publication of a prospective multicentre study regarding the role of mediastinal staging by video-assisted mediastinoscopy (VAM) in patients with clinical N1 (cN1) nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) [1]. The objective of the study was to assess the sensitivity, negative predictive value and accuracy of VAM in a well-defined group of patients with cN1.
This nonrandomised prospective study planned to recruit 250 NSCLC patients with stage cT1-3N1M0 deemed operable based on integrated fluorodeoxyglucose-positron-emission tomography/computed tomography. The surgical resection with systemic nodal dissection was the reference standard. The primary end-point was sensitivity, defined as the proportion of patients with positive mediastinal staging by VAM or VAM-lymphadenectomy (VAMLA) out of all the patients with mediastinal nodal disease.
The authors concluded that 25% of the patients within the study eventually had unsuspected N2 disease with a 73% sensitivity by VAM and proposed the procedure as a possible standard of care in this setting.
As conceived by the authors, there are several limitations in this study, two particularly important and worth mentioning further. The first regards the slow and inadequate recruitment leading to only 105 patients being enrolled into the study instead of the pre-planned 250 patients. The second point is the fact that in nearly one-third (31%) of cases the nodal dissection was performed by VAMLA and not only by VAM. Although similar, the two procedures are different: during VAMLA a systematic lymphadenectomy is performed bi-manually through the video mediastinoscope and the number of lymph nodes removed is doubled compared to standard mediastinoscopy [2].
Although these two issues do not allow us to conclude that VAM(LA) could be a new standard in cN1 NSCLC patients, another point regards the real implication of routinely performing VAM(LA) in this setting. Even if this is recommended within the guidelines of the European Society of Thoracic Surgeons [3], the level of evidence is certainly not that strong (level IIB) and unlikely to change the outcome or treatment of such patients. There is also evidence that patients with unsuspected N2 disease have a better overall survival than those with standard N2 nodal disease [4] and that those with single-station N2 involvement have similar overall survival than those with multiple N1 disease, as established recently [5].
In conclusion, we should certainly praise the authors for making such an effort to design and conduct a multicentre prospective study; however, we believe that there is not adequate evidence to justify VAM(LA) as a standard tool to adopt in all cN1 NSCLC patients preoperatively.
Footnotes
Conflict of interest: None declared.
- Received January 15, 2018.
- Accepted January 23, 2018.
- Copyright ©ERS 2018