Background: The prognosis of patients with resected non-small cell lung cancer without carcinomatous pleuritis whose intrapleural cancer cells were detected by means of a cytologic examination of pleural lavage fluid obtained immediately after a thoracotomy has been reported to be poor.
Methods: The Japan Clinical Oncology Group conducted a phase III trial for a 3-year period starting from October 1994 to determine whether intraoperative intrapleural hypotonic cisplatin treatment could effectively control pleural disease and thereby prolong the survival of these patients. The patients were randomized to receive either intraoperative intrapleural hypotonic cisplatin treatment or no treatment before closure of the open thorax. The intraoperative intrapleural hypotonic cisplatin treatment consisted of exposing the entire thorax to cisplatin (50 microg/mL) in distilled water for 15 minutes.
Results: Because of the slow registration pace, the study was prematurely terminated in January 1998. During the 41-month period from the start of the registration, 49 patients were entered into the study, and all were eligible. Twenty-five and 24 patients were randomly assigned to the treatment and control groups, respectively. No statistically significant difference in the overall survival and disease-free survival between the 2 groups was observed. However, the appearance of carcinomatous pleuritis was suppressed by the hypotonic cisplatin treatment (42% of the control group vs 8% of the treatment group, P =.008).
Conclusions: Although the randomized trial was prematurely terminated, the intraoperative intrapleural hypotonic cisplatin treatment was found to effectively suppress the appearance of carcinomatous pleuritis in resected patients who demonstrated a positive pleural lavage cytology finding.