Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1986; 34(1): 39-42
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1020370
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Surgical Resection and Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Small Cell Carcinoma

N. M. Merkle, G. H. Mickisch, K. Kayser, P. Drings, I. Vogt-Moykopf
  • Rohrbach Hospital, Clinic for Thoracic Medicine, Heidelberg, FRG
Further Information

Publication History

1985

Publication Date:
19 March 2008 (online)

Summary

Poor long-term results following the surgical management of small cell carcinoma have contributed to the opinion that small cell carcinoma is a non-surgical disease; polychemotherapy is generally given preference. As nowadays adequate therapy (chemotherapy) achieves control of local tumor growth as well as of extended metastases, surgical resections should be discussed from a different viewpoint: “Does surgery profit from modern chemotherapy? ” In our clinic, 1332 patients have been operated on for bronchogenic carcinoma from 1973 to 1983: 170 (12.8 %) suffered from small cell carcinoma. The indications for surgery were either non-histologically classified tumors (e.g. peripheral coin lesions) or small cell carcinomas stage I, and only in rare cases for palliative reasons. Lobectomy, including bronchoplastic and arterioplastic resections (n = 108), was the most common procedure. The postoperative mortality was 15 %, the average survival 341 days, the latter having improved significantly since 1979 when a postoperative polychemotherapy (ACO) was instigated. Recent results of surgical resection after primary chemotherapy are encouraging. Nevertheless, this new concept is reserved for the few cases of strictly limited disease and must be controlled by future studies.