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Imaging, Diagnosis, Prognosis |
Authors' Affiliations: 1 Department of Surgery and Clinical Science, Division of Chest Surgery and 2 Department of Radiopathological and Science, Division of Radiology, Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine, Yamaguchi, Japan
Requests for reprints: Kazuhiro Ueda, Department of Surgery and Clinical Science, Division of Chest Surgery, Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine, 1-1-1 Minami-Kogushi, Ube, Yamaguchi 755-8505, Japan. Phone: 81-836-22-2261; Fax: 81-836-22-22-2423; E-mail: kaueda{at}c-able.ne.jp.
Purpose: Because both emphysema and lung cancer can arise from biological damage caused by cigarette smoking, we investigated if the development of emphysema is associated with the clinical features of smoker's lung cancer.
Experimental Design: The subjects were a consecutive series of 100 smokers who underwent lobectomy with hilar and mediastinal dissection for clinical stage I nonsmall cell lung cancer. We studied the relationship between the presence or absence of emphysema at the onset of the lung cancer and clinicopathologic features. Emphysema was diagnosed by measuring the low-attenuation area using computed tomography densitometry.
Results: There were no differences in clinicopathologic variables, including the degree of smoking exposure between the patients with (n = 58) and those without (n = 42) emphysema, although male gender and airflow limitation were predominant in the patients with emphysema. The presence of emphysema, but neither male gender nor airflow limitation, adversely affected both overall and disease-specific survival. According to Cox regression analysis, emphysema was an independent prognosticator among age, gender, degree of smoking exposure, tumor size, nodal status, histologic subtype, histologic grade, and microvessel invasion. These results were stabilized by a bootstrap sampling model.
Conclusions: Computed tomographydiagnosed emphysema, but not airway obstruction, is associated with poor prognosis in smokers with early-stage lung cancer. Thus, routine computed tomography densitometry in smokers with lung cancer should be mandatory.
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