Surgery for bronchioloalveolar carcinoma and "very early" adenocarcinoma: an evolving standard of care?
Review
Overview
abstract
Lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection is the standard surgical management of early stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) because more limited resections have been associated with a higher risk of local recurrence. Nevertheless, recent lung cancer screening studies have led to the detection of an increasing number of "very early" NSCLC (defined as less than 2 cm in size) and of good-prognosis histologic subtypes, bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (BAC), and adenocarcinoma (AC), mixed subtypes that are potentially appropriate for sublobar resection. The precise indications for sublobar resection remain unclear and are the subject of ongoing clinical trials, but it seems that very early, peripherally located, node-negative AC of a predominantly BAC pattern may be adequately treated in this manner. Multifocal AC and BAC, either synchronous or metachronous, are also effectively treated by complete resection, using limited resections whenever possible. The pneumonic form of BAC, the rarest variant of this disease spectrum, continues to have a poor prognosis despite complete resection. Very limited experience suggests that lung transplantation leads to prolonged survival in highly selected patients with this histologic subtype. To improve our management of very early AC, much more information is needed about the molecular abnormalities of AC and their relationship to clinical outcomes.