Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Enrolling by invitation
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT06028412 |
Other study ID # |
XKT-Y-20221121 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Enrolling by invitation |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 1, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2030 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2023 |
Source |
Tang-Du Hospital |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The early NSCLC(Non-small cell lung cancer) patients with partial solid nodules mainly
composed of solid components, whose maximum tumor diameter was ≤ 2.0cm and
0.5<CTR(Consolidation tumor ratio)<1, as indicated by preoperative thin slice CT, were
selected as the study objects. The short-term and long-term effects of segmental resection
and lobectomy under Thoracoscopy were compared to provide high-level evidence for the
selection of surgical treatment methods for early NSCLC.
Description:
Since Cahan reported on "radical lobectomy" in 1960, lobectomy has become the standard
surgical method for lung cancer, and its efficacy has long been verified in clinical
practice. In 2006, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) lung cancer diagnosis and
treatment guidelines listed thoracoscopic lobectomy as one of the standard surgical methods
for early non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) for the first time. However, in recent years, an
increasing number of retrospective studies have found that the efficacy of subpulmonary
lobectomy in treating stage IA NSCLC is similar to that of lobectomy. Not only is there no
difference in survival rate, but perioperative complications and mortality are lower, and
lung function is also more protected. Anatomical segmental lung resection was also
recommended as one of the surgical options for early NSCLC patients by the US NCCN guidelines
in 2010. With the development of thin-layer CT diagnosis and treatment technology, the
detection rate of early lung cancer with main imaging manifestations such as small pulmonary
nodules and ground glass nodules (GGO) has improved. The solid components in GGO are often
considered as infiltrating components with a high possibility. The Lung Cancer Surgery
Research Group (LCSSG) of the Japanese Clinical Oncology Group used Solid Component Ratio for
ground glass nodules, which stratified the study population by the ratio of the maximum solid
component diameter to the maximum tumor diameter, and began multiple clinical trials related
to subpulmonary lobectomy, And these clinical trials will clarify whether subpulmonary
lobectomy can be used as a standard surgical procedure for early NSCLC patients.
Among them, the recently released research results of the JCOG 0802 trial suggest that for
peripheral NSCLC with tumor diameter ≤ 2cm and CTR>0.5, the segmental resection group even
outperforms the lobectomy group in terms of 5-year OS as the main endpoint, which overturns
people's understanding of early lung cancer surgery methods. The JCOG 0802 results showed
that the local recurrence rate in the segmental resection group was 10.5%, while in the
lobectomy group it was 5.4% (p=0.0018). However, the relatively high value of local
recurrence in the segmental resection group did not result in a decrease in the final 5-year
RFS and 5-year OS. And in the JCOG 0201 study, the tumor size of all recurrent cases within 5
and 10 years after surgery was ≥ 1cm, and the majority were patients with CTR=1.0. However,
it is worth noting that the JCOG 0802 experiment also has corresponding problems: 1. The
initial enrollment condition is CTR>0.25, and with the release of the long-term results of
the JCOG 0201 experiment, the CTR value is adjusted from 0.25 to 0.5; 2. More than half of
the enrolled patients have pure solid nodules (CTR=1.0); 3. During the research phase,
preoperative 3D reconstruction technology was not used for surgical resection range planning.
Therefore, the experimental results of JCOG 0802 deserve further in-depth research, and the
choice of surgical methods for patients with partial solid nodules (PSN) with a diameter ≤
2cm and a CTR<1 is also the most perplexing issue for thoracic surgeons at present. Someone
has proposed that for PSN patients with a diameter ≤ 2cm, subpulmonary lobectomy surgery can
replace traditional lobectomy surgery, and patients have similar prognosis. However, this
theory is derived from retrospective studies and there is a lack of relevant prospective
randomized controlled study data, which should be confirmed in prospective studies.
Therefore, the issues raised in the above research pose key scientific questions for the
implementation of this project: whether segmental resection of the lung has similar long-term
survival and short-term efficacy to lobectomy for patients with partial solid nodules with a
tumor diameter of ≤ 2cm and 0.5