Surgical Treatment of Primary Lung Cancer and Solitary Intracranial Metastasis

Autor: Catinella, Frank P., Kittle, C. Frederick, Faber, L. Penfield, Milloy, Frank J., Warren, William H., Von Roenn, Kelvin A.
Zdroj: Chest; May 1989, Vol. 95 Issue: 5 p972-975, 4p
Abstrakt: From 1976 through 1986, 12 patients underwent 14 thoracotomies (two patients had a second thoracotomy for recurrence) and 16 craniotomies (two patients had three craniotomies for recurrence) for carcinoma of the lung and solitary intracranial metastasis. Age ranged from 40 to 65 years. Adjuvant therapy (chemotherapy and thoracic irradiation) was employed in three patients prior to thoracotomy and in four patients following thoracotomy. Whole-brain irradiation was used in four patients after craniotomy. Improvement in neurologic symptoms following craniotomy was noted in 15 of 16 instances. There were no operative mortalities. Overall survival from the time of initial diagnosis ranged from 13 to 63 months. Survival following initial craniotomy ranged from 12 to 56 months. Eight patients are currently alive and well with no disabling neurological symptoms. These results support an aggressive approach to the resection of solitary brain metastasis from bronchogenic carcinoma, both for palliation and prolongation of survival.
Databáze: Supplemental Index