Original article
General thoracic
Gemcitabine-Cisplatin Chemotherapy Before Lung Resection: A Case-Matched Analysis of Early Outcome

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.athoracsur.2006.01.012Get rights and content

Background

The objective of the present study was to assess whether neoadjuvant chemotherapy with gemcitabine and cisplatin was associated with an increased incidence of morbidity and mortality after major lung resection for lung cancer.

Methods

We analyzed 570 patients who underwent lobectomy or pneumonectomy for nonsmall-cell lung cancer at our institution from January 2000 through June 2005. Of these, 70 patients underwent three cycles of gemcitabine-cisplatin chemotherapy before operation for locally advanced disease. Propensity scores were constructed to match those patients undergoing neoadjuvant chemotherapy and lung resection with those undergoing surgery alone. The propensity score analysis yielded two groups of 70 well-matched pairs that were compared in terms of baseline characteristics and early outcome (morbidity, mortality, length of postoperative stay, intensive care unit admission).

Results

The two case-matched groups had similar morbidity (p = 0.8), mortality (p = 0.4), perioperative blood transfusions (p = 0.8) and intensive care unit admission rates (p = 0.8). Likewise, the length of postoperative stay did not differ between the groups (p = 0.9).

Conclusions

Gemcitabin-cisplatin neoadjuvant chemotherapy appears to be safe before major lung resection. This finding warrants its use for efficacy studies of locally advanced and even early-stage lung cancer.

Section snippets

Patients and Methods

We analyzed 570 patients (449 male, 121 female) undergoing major lung resection (478 lobectomy/bilobectomy, 92 pneumonectomy) for NSCLC from January 2000 through June 2005 at our institution. The study was approved by the local Institutional Review Board after informed consent was obtained from all patients. This is an observational study performed on a prospective, quality-controlled, electronic database.

Criteria of resectability were assessed by computed tomography (CT) scan, bronchoscopy,

Results

Total morbidity and mortality rates were 24% (138 cases) and 4.4% (25 cases), respectively. Among the 70 patients undergoing gemcitabine-cisplatin chemotherapy before lung resection, the morbidity and mortality rates were of 26% (18 cases) and 2.9% (2 cases), respectively. Thirty patients underwent neoadjuvant chemotherapy and pneumonectomy. Their morbidity and mortality rates were 30% (9 cases) and 0, respectively. Among the 9 patients with concurrent chemoradiotherapy (not included in the

Comment

The present study showed that gemcitabine-cisplatin neoadjuvant chemotherapy did not increase the incidence of morbidity nor mortality nor intensive care unit admission rates after major lung resection, compared with propensity score matched patients who underwent surgery without chemotherapy.

Some authors reported an increased incidence of morbidity and mortality after neoadjuvant chemotherapy and lung resection, particularly after pneumonectomy, with mortality rates as high as 24% [4, 11, 12,

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