8548 Background: Since any surgery for malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) are cytoreductive, effective chemotherapy is a prerequisite for surgery. In this context, we give neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) to all surgical… Click to show full abstract
8548 Background: Since any surgery for malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) are cytoreductive, effective chemotherapy is a prerequisite for surgery. In this context, we give neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (NAC) to all surgical candidates. Methods: Hyogo College of Medicine MPM Surgery Program mandates all surgical candidates to receive NAC, and only patients with stable disease (SD) or better response proceeds to surgery. The program comprised NAC followed by extrapleural pneumonectomy (EPP) and hemithoracic radiation until 2012, and NAC followed by pleurectomy/decortication (P/D) and postoperative chemotherapy thereafter. Eligibility criteria are histologically confirmed non-sarcomatoid MPM, clinically resectable stage (T1-3N0-1M0), performance status 0–1, and no major comorbidity. Results: From December 2006 to December 2018, 225 patients were enrolled. Of 225, 24 patients (10.7%, Group A) did not proceed to surgery because of progressive disease (n=23) or serious adverse events (n=2). Of the remaining 201 patients with partial response (n=38, 16.9%) or stable disease (n=163, 72.4%), 19 refused surgery (Group B), 16 received exploratory thoracotomy (Group C), and 165 completed surgery (Group D, EPP58, P/D107). Surgical mortality rates at 30 and 90 days were 1.1% (n=2) and 2.8% (n=5), and surgical morbidity (≧grade 3) was 26.0% (n=47). Median survival time and survival rates of each group were shown in the table. Briefly, 2-yr survival competed among Group B,C and D, whereas 5-yr survival rapidly dropped in Group B and C. Conclusions: Approximately 90% of MPM patients with surgical intent successfully underwent either of EPP or P/D after effective chemotherapy with acceptable surgical mortality and morbidity. Comparison of patients who refused or accepted surgery suggested that surgery contributed to long-term survival. [Table: see text]
               
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