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Lung metastases

From Surgopaedia

Isolated pulmonary metastases are often treatable, essentially regardless of underlying tumour type

Requirements for consideration of resection:

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  • Pulmonary parenchymal nodules consistent with metastasis
  • Absence of uncontrolled or untreated extra-thoracic metastases
  • Control of the primary tumour
  • Sufficient physiologic and pulmonary reserve to tolerate the procedure
  • Probability of complete resection
  • Other potential situations
    • A new primary lung cancer cannot be excluded
    • Symptomatic metastases that cannot be managed in any other way
    • Tissue needs to be obtained to enable a novel therapeutic strategy

If patients do not meet those criteria, consider stereotactic radiotherapy, RFA, or cryoablation

Contraindications:

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  • Brain metastases
  • N2 nodal involvement for tumours other than RCC
  • Inability to completely resect all pulmonary involvement
  • Prior pneumonectomy (relative contraindication)

Unfavourable prognostic indicators that may influence decision to resect:

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  • Short disease-free interval following resection of the primary
  • 4 or more pulmonary mets
  • Involved lymph nodes

Pre-operative workup

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  • CT chest
  • PET
  • Brain imaging

Prognosis

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  • Long-term survival (>5 years) may be expected in 20-30% of all patients with resectable pulmonary metastases
  • Favourable indicators:
    • Disease-free interval greater than 3 years
    • Solitary pulmonary nodule
    • Germ cell histology
  • See UTD article 'Surgical resection of pulmonary metastases: outcomes by histology'