Purpose: We aimed to investigate the treatment effect of chemotherapy on ground-glass opacity (GGO)-featured lung adenocarcinoma radiologically and pathologically.
Methods: This retrospective study included patients who met the following criteria: (1) presence of lung GGO lesions before chemotherapy for other concurrent malignancies; (2) underwent surgical resection of GGO-featured primary lung adenocarcinoma. The last computed tomography images before chemotherapy (CT1) and the last images before GGO resection (CT2) were reviewed to assess radiologic response. Specimens of the resected tumors were reviewed to evaluate the histopathologic response. Immunohistochemical staining of ki-67, caspase-3 and β-gal was performed and compared between these tumors and a propensity score-matched (1:1) cohort of GGO-featured lung adenocarcinoma without prior chemotherapy.
Results: Forty-four patients with 55 GGO lesions were included. There were 20 mixed GGOs and 22 invasive adenocarcinomas. These patients all received at least three cycles of chemotherapy for other concurrent malignancies in breast, lung, cervix, ovary or rectum. Thirty-four (77%) patients received chemotherapy regimens that contained platinum, pemetrexed, paclitaxel, docetaxel or gemcitabine. The median interval between CT1 and CT2 was 10 months. Radiologically, all the GGO lesions either remained unchanged or enlarged. There was no chemotherapy-induced histopathologic response (necrosis, fibrosis or inflammation) in any of these tumors. The protein expression of ki-67, caspase-3 and β-gal was comparable between GGO-featured lung adenocarcinoma with or without prior chemotherapy.
Conclusion: GGO-featured lung adenocarcinoma has no response to chemotherapy. For these patients, chemotherapy should not be a treatment option.
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Ground-glass opacity; Lung adenocarcinoma; Pathology.