Carcinoids are malignant neuroendocrine neoplasms showing good long-term survival after oncologic therapy. The study evaluated the influence of operative strategies and individual decision-making on the outcome and long-term survival in… Click to show full abstract
Carcinoids are malignant neuroendocrine neoplasms showing good long-term survival after oncologic therapy. The study evaluated the influence of operative strategies and individual decision-making on the outcome and long-term survival in 222 patients with bronchial carcinoids. The patients underwent preoperative pulmonary function tests and bronchoscopy to facilitate surgical decision-making. A hundred and twelve tumors were detected endoscopically, including 32 in the main and lobar bronchi. We performed 5 isolated bronchus resections, 4 segmentectomies, 15 wedge resections, 10 pneumonectomies, 19 sleeve resections, 26 bilobectomies, 138 lobectomies, and 2 chest wall resections. Three patients were technically inoperable. Systematic mediastinal lymphadenectomy was routinely performed although most patients' computer tomography scans showed N0. A hundred and sixty-two patients had typical (155 N0, 7 N+) and 60 patients had atypical carcinoids (39 N0, 21 N+). There was no intraoperative mortality. The hospital mortality was below 2%. Overall, 1-, 5-, and 10-year survival rates were 99%, 94%, and 89%, respectively, in typical carcinoids. Atypical carcinoids show similar 1- and 5-year survival rates, but the 10-year survival rate was below 70%, decreasing in higher N-stages. The N-stage was the most important survival factor. In conclusion, bronchial carcinoids should be surgically treated the way lung cancer is. Anatomic resection and systematic lymphadenectomy are the treatments of choice. The availability of bronchoplastic techniques and preoperative assessment is essential for individual decision-making, focusing predominantly on postoperative quality of life.
               
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