TY - JOUR
T1 - An international and multidisciplinary EORTC survey on resectability of stage III non-small cell lung cancer
AU - Houda, Ilias
AU - Bahce, Idris
AU - Dickhoff, Chris
AU - Kroese, Tiuri E.
AU - Kroeze, Stephanie G.C.
AU - Mariolo, Alessio V.
AU - Tagliamento, Marco
AU - Moliner, Laura
AU - Brandão, Mariana
AU - Pretzenbacher, Yassin
AU - Edwards, John
AU - Opitz, Isabelle
AU - Brunelli, Alessandro
AU - Guckenberger, Matthias
AU - van Schil, Paul E.
AU - Popat, Sanjay
AU - Blum, Torsten
AU - Faivre-Finn, Corinne
AU - de Ruysscher, Dirk
AU - Remon, Jordi
AU - Berghmans, Thierry
AU - Dingemans, Anne Marie C.
AU - Besse, Benjamin
AU - Hendriks, Lizza E.L.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2025/1/1
Y1 - 2025/1/1
N2 - Introduction: The EORTC-Lung Cancer Group initiated a Delphi consensus process to establish a consensual definition of resectable stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for the use in clinical trials, including a systematic review, survey, and review of clinical cases. Here, the survey results are presented, aimed to identify areas of controversy. Methods: A survey was distributed among the members of six international organizations related to lung cancer. Respondents were interrogated on the resectability (not limited to the technical resectability) of all stage III NSCLC TNM-subsets (8th edition). Additionally, four N2-subdivisions were used. The threshold for agreement was 75%. Answers with “yes” were considered upfront resectable. “Yes” and “maybe” were grouped together and considered potentially resectable. Answers with “no” were considered unresectable. Results: 558 responses were collected from thoracic surgeons (38%), radiation oncologists (27%), medical oncologists (17%), pulmonologists (14%), and others (4%). Most worked in a specialized center (80%), had >5 years of experience (80%), were European (76%), male (73%), and treated >20 patients with stage III NSCLC annually (77%). Agreement was found in 26 (70%) out of 37 TNM-subsets: 9 (24%) were considered (potentially) resectable, and 17 (46%) unresectable. There was no agreement for 11 (30%) TNM-subsets: smaller tumors with N2-multistation, larger tumors with N2-single station, and invasive T4-tumors with maximum N2-single station involvement. Conclusions: This international and multidisciplinary survey showed agreement on the resectability for the majority of stage III NSCLC TNM-subsets, but also identified several TNM-subsets for which no agreement was found.
AB - Introduction: The EORTC-Lung Cancer Group initiated a Delphi consensus process to establish a consensual definition of resectable stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for the use in clinical trials, including a systematic review, survey, and review of clinical cases. Here, the survey results are presented, aimed to identify areas of controversy. Methods: A survey was distributed among the members of six international organizations related to lung cancer. Respondents were interrogated on the resectability (not limited to the technical resectability) of all stage III NSCLC TNM-subsets (8th edition). Additionally, four N2-subdivisions were used. The threshold for agreement was 75%. Answers with “yes” were considered upfront resectable. “Yes” and “maybe” were grouped together and considered potentially resectable. Answers with “no” were considered unresectable. Results: 558 responses were collected from thoracic surgeons (38%), radiation oncologists (27%), medical oncologists (17%), pulmonologists (14%), and others (4%). Most worked in a specialized center (80%), had >5 years of experience (80%), were European (76%), male (73%), and treated >20 patients with stage III NSCLC annually (77%). Agreement was found in 26 (70%) out of 37 TNM-subsets: 9 (24%) were considered (potentially) resectable, and 17 (46%) unresectable. There was no agreement for 11 (30%) TNM-subsets: smaller tumors with N2-multistation, larger tumors with N2-single station, and invasive T4-tumors with maximum N2-single station involvement. Conclusions: This international and multidisciplinary survey showed agreement on the resectability for the majority of stage III NSCLC TNM-subsets, but also identified several TNM-subsets for which no agreement was found.
KW - Immune checkpoint inhibitors
KW - Lung neoplasms
KW - Non-small cell lung cancer
KW - Resectability
KW - Surgery
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212424899&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.lungcan.2024.108061
DO - 10.1016/j.lungcan.2024.108061
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85212424899
SN - 0169-5002
VL - 199
JO - Lung Cancer
JF - Lung Cancer
M1 - 108061
ER -