Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1986; 34(5): 326-329
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1022163
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

The Role of Surgery in the Combined Management of Small Cell Bronchial Carcinoma

G. M. Salzer1 , L. Ch. Müller2 , H. Frommhold3 , H. Huber4 , M. Lechleitner5
  • 1II. Surgical Clinic, Department of Thoracic Surgery
  • 2II. Surgical Clinic, Department of Thoracic Surgery
  • 3Clinic for Radiotherapy
  • 4Policlinic for Oncology and Hematology, University of Innsbruck
  • 5Policlinic for Oncology and Hematology, University of Innsbruck
Further Information

Publication History

1986

Publication Date:
19 March 2008 (online)

Summary

Even after the introduction of modern chemotherapeutic regimens and radiotherapeutic approaches in the treatment of small cell bronchial carcinoma (SCLC), the results are still disillusioning. Long-term remissions are rare even in patients with limited disease.

We review 66 patients with SCLC (limited disease) which we treated either by single therapies (chemotherapy, radiotherapy, surgery n= 16), or by different combinations of the possible therapeutic measures. Favorable results were achieved by a comprehensive treatment including operation, chemotherapy and prophylactic cranial and local irradiation: 11 of 15 patients survived 3 to 97 months after the onset of therapy, 4 of those more than 24 months. Based on our own experience and the results of other authors we feel that surgical resection should be again included as an essential part of treatment: tumor resection is the rational primary therapeutic approach for cases without lymph node metastases in the mediastinum and for tumors of uncertain histological type. If there is evidence of lymph node involvement in the mediastinum (N2), surgery should be performed after a remission has been successfully induced by chemotherapy (so-called adjuvant surgery).

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