Background: Although the survival benefit of adjuvant chemotherapy for nonsmall-cell lung cancer has been proved, 50% to 86% of patients received all planned cycles of chemotherapy. A thoracoscopic procedure may enable more effective administration of adjuvant chemotherapy than a thoracotomy. However, a well-balanced comparison is lacking.
Methods: Patients who underwent pulmonary resection and received platinum-based double adjuvant chemotherapy for nonsmall-cell lung cancer were identified from a prospective database. A propensity score-matched analysis was performed to obtain a well-balanced comparison between thoracoscopy and thoracotomy to determine compliance of adjuvant chemotherapy.
Results: Seventy-four patients (group A) with thoracoscopy and 278 patients with thoracotomy received adjuvant chemotherapy. Through 1:1 matching, 74 patients (group B) were selected from the thoracotomy group. A higher percentage of group A received four cycles of the planned adjuvant chemotherapy (95.9% versus 82.4%, p = 0.015). There was a trend toward better compliance in group A with four cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy without reduced dose (83.8% versus 73.0%, p = 0.162), and four cycles of adjuvant chemotherapy without delayed or reduced dose (70.3% versus 62.2%, p = 0.385).
Conclusions: Thoracoscopy showed better compliance with adjuvant chemotherapy after pulmonary resection for nonsmall-cell lung cancer.
Copyright © 2011 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.