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Surgical treatment of non-small cell lung cancer 1 cm or less in diameter  Daniel L Miller, MD, Charles M Rowland, MS, Claude Deschamps, MD, Mark S Allen,

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Presentation on theme: "Surgical treatment of non-small cell lung cancer 1 cm or less in diameter  Daniel L Miller, MD, Charles M Rowland, MS, Claude Deschamps, MD, Mark S Allen,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Surgical treatment of non-small cell lung cancer 1 cm or less in diameter 
Daniel L Miller, MD, Charles M Rowland, MS, Claude Deschamps, MD, Mark S Allen, MD, Victor F Trastek, MD, Peter C Pairolero, MD  The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  Volume 73, Issue 5, Pages (May 2002) DOI: /S (02)

2 Fig 1 Probability of survival (death from any cause and death from lung cancer) in 100 patients who underwent resection of a non–small cell lung cancer 1 cm or less in diameter; 34 patients alive at 5 years. Zero time on the abscissa represents the date of thoracotomy. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (02) )

3 Fig 2 Probability of survival (death from any cause) in 75 patients who underwent formal resection as compared with the 25 patients who underwent limited resection; 31 and 3 patients alive at 5 years for the formal resection and the limited resection groups, respectively (p = 0.03). Zero time on the abscissa represents the date of thoracotomy. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (02) )

4 Fig 3 Probability of survival (death from any cause) in 75 patients who underwent lobectomy compared with 12 patients who had segmentectomy and 13 patients who had wedge excision of a non–small cell lung cancer 1 cm or less in diameter; 31, 1, and 2 patients alive at 5 years for patients undergoing lobectomy, segmentectomy, and wedge resection, respectively (p = 0.03). Zero time on the abscissa represents the date of thoracotomy. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (02) )

5 Fig 4 Probability of survival (death from lung cancer) in 75 patients who underwent lobectomy compared with 12 patients who had segmentectomy and 13 patients who had wedge excision of a non–small cell lung cancer 1 cm or less in diameter; 31, 1, and 2 patients alive at 5 years for patients undergoing lobectomy, segmentectomy, and wedge resection, respectively (p = 0.04). Zero time on the abscissa represents the date of thoracotomy. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (02) )

6 Fig 5 Probability of survival (death from any cause) in 93 patients without lymph node metastases as compared with the 7 patients who had lymph node metastases; 31 and 3 patients alive at 5 years for patients with negative and positive lymph nodes, respectively (p = 0.15). Zero time on the abscissa represents the date of thoracotomy. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (02) )

7 Fig 6 Probability of survival (death from lung cancer) in 93 patients without lymph node metastases as compared with the 7 patients who had lymph node metastases; 31 and 3 patients alive at 5 years for patients with negative and positive lymph nodes, respectively (p = 0.08). Zero time on the abscissa represents the date of thoracotomy. The Annals of Thoracic Surgery  , DOI: ( /S (02) )


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