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The management of resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has evolved dramatically over the past three decades. Once limited to surgery, treatment strategies now include chemotherapy, immunotherapy, radiation, and targeted therapies. Despite advances in clinical trials and updated guidelines, several gray areas persist in practice. This review highlights two commonly encountered dilemmas, framed by recent trial data. The first dilemma is centered on the question: for a patient with a 4.1 cm node-negative tumor, is the optimal approach neoadjuvant, adjuvant, or perioperative chemoimmunotherapy? CheckMate 816 demonstrated improved pathological complete response and event-free survival with neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy. Perioperative approaches, combining neoadjuvant and adjuvant immunotherapy, showed promising outcomes in KEYNOTE-671, AEGEAN, and CheckMate 77T, whereas IMpower010 and KEYNOTE-091 demonstrated benefit with adjuvant therapy. Moreover, for patients with EGFR or ALK mutations, targeted therapies have shifted the treatment paradigm, as shown in the ADAURA and ALINA trials. However, no head-to-head comparisons among these strategies exist, limiting decision-making. The second dilemma involves a hypothetical scenario of a patient a with biopsy-proven T1cN2 disease: should treatment involve neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy followed by surgery, or chemoradiation followed by consolidation immunotherapy (durvalumab) or targeted agents (such as osimertinib)? The PACIFIC and LAURA trials support the latter approach for unresectable disease, while CheckMate 816 supports surgery for resectable N2 cases. Yet defining resectability remains subjective, especially with multistation or bulky N2 disease. While the upcoming AJCC 9th edition proposes a subdivision of N2 into N2a (single-station) and N2b (multi-station), offering a potential step forward, this refinement has yet to translate into clear clinical guidance. These scenarios highlight the need for prospective, stage stratified trials, designed to address these pertinent questions so that improved guidelines may help clinical decision making in borderline cases.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1245/s10434-025-17345-2 | DOI Listing |
Int J Surg
September 2025
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Changchun Tumor Hospital.
Objective: The risk factors of postoperative survival in T4N0M0 NSCLC patients are not fully understood. This study aimed to develop and validate a nomogram model for predicting postoperative survival in patients with T4N0M0 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
Methods: Clinicopathological data of patients were collected from Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database.
Surg Endosc
September 2025
Department of Thoracic Surgery, National Cancer Center/National Clinical Research Center for Cancer/Cancer Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, 100021, China.
Background: Surgical resection is the cornerstone for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), with lobectomy historically standard. Evolving techniques have spurred debate comparing lobectomy and segmentectomy. This study analyzed early postoperative patient-reported symptoms and functional status in patients with early NSCLC undergoing either procedure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer
September 2025
Thoracic Oncology Service, Department of Medicine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York, USA.
Background: Trials of neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy (chemoIO) have changed the standard of care for resectable nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC). This study characterizes the outcomes of off-trial patients who received treatment with neoadjuvant chemoIO.
Methods: The authors analyzed records of patients with stage IB-III NSCLC who received neoadjuvant chemoIO with an intent to proceed to surgical resection at three US academic institutions.
JTCVS Open
August 2025
Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Scottsdale, Ariz and Rochester, Minn.
Objective: Pulmonary carcinoid tumors are an uncommon entity, with an incidence of 1.35 cases per 100,000 individuals. Although decisions about surgical resection are commonly made similarly to those for non-small cell lung cancer, data surrounding the optimal treatment and prognostication for patients with advanced disease are limited.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJTCVS Open
August 2025
Department of Thoracic Surgery, National Cancer Center Hospital, Tokyo, Japan.
Objective: To evaluate whether results of the JCOG0802/WJOG4607L trial, which demonstrated the superiority of segmentectomy over lobectomy in terms of overall survival for patients with peripheral small-sized lung cancer, are applicable to clinical practice.
Methods: In this single-center retrospective analysis, we categorized patients who underwent lobectomy or segmentectomy during the enrollment period of the JCOG0802/WJOG4607L trial into 3 groups: patients enrolled in the trial (Cohort A), patients who were eligible but not enrolled (Cohort B), and ineligible patients (Cohort C). We assessed whether trial participants reflected typical patients seen in clinical practice (representativeness) and whether trial results could be applied in routine practice (generalizability) by comparing patient characteristics and survival between cohorts, using Cohort A as the reference.