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Lung nodules

From Surgopaedia

`A small (<=30mm) well-defined lesion/opacity surrounded by pulmonary parenchyma

  • Lesions >30mm are defined as masses, and are much more likely to harbour malignancy, and are generally resected unless obviously benign features

Principles of workup

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  • Differentiate between benign and malignant
  • Efficient and cost-effective patient management
  • Minimal discomfort and risk of complications

Approach

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  • Evaluate clinical history and risk factors for likely aetiologies
  • Estimate risk of cancer
  • Manage based on risk

Aetiology

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  • Malignant
    • Bronchogenic carcinoma
      • Adenocarcinoma
      • SqCC
      • Large cell carcinoma
      • Small cell carcinoma
    • Pulmonary carcinoid
    • Extranodal lymphoma
    • Miscellaneous
      • Plasmacytoma
      • Schwannoma
    • Metastatic
      • Breast
      • Head and neck
      • Melanoma
      • Colon
      • Kidney
      • Sarcoma
      • Germ cell tumour
      • Others
  • Benign
    • Infectious granuloma
      • Histoplasmosis
      • Coccidioidomycosis
      • TB
      • Atypical mycobacteria
      • Cryptococcosis
      • Blastomycosis
    • Other infections
      • Bacterial abscess
      • Dirofilaria immitis
      • Echinococcus cyst
      • Ascariasis
      • Pneumocystis jirovecii
      • Aspergillus
      • Septic emboli
    • Benign neoplasms
      • Hamartoma
      • Lipoma
      • Fibroma
      • Neurofibroma
      • Leiomyoma
      • Angioma
    • Vascular
      • AVM
      • Pulmonary varix
      • Haematoma
      • Pulmonary infarct
    • Developmental
      • Bronchogenic cyst
    • Inflammatory
      • Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (Wegener's)
      • Rheumatoid nodule
      • Sarcoidosis
    • Other
      • Amyloidoma
      • Rounded atelectasis
      • Intrapulmonary lymph node
      • Pseudotumour (loculated fluid)
      • Mucoid impaction
      • Nipple shadow
      • Skinfold
      • Rib fracture
      • Infected bulla

Clinical history

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  • Vast majority asymptomatic, however look for risk factors and aetiologies
  • Risk factors for cancer
    • Older age
    • Male
    • Smoking history
    • History of prior malignancy - malignant rate of 64% in new lung nodules, and still 40% if <5mm - hence met until proven otherwise
    • Haemoptysis
  • Symptoms
    • Respiratory symptoms - can occur with centrally located lesions
    • Systemic features - B symptoms

Imaging

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  • Risk factors for cancer
    • Nodule diameter
    • Spiculation/irregular/lobulated
    • Upper lobe location
    • Growth rate
    • Calcification pattern
      • Benign = diffuse, central, laminated
      • Popcorn pattern = hamartoma
      • Indeterminate = punctate, eccentric, or amorphous
    • Contrast enhancement (>20HU is likely malignant, <15HU is likely benign)
    • Metabolic activity on PET
    • Air bronchograms and pseudocavitation - often malignant
  • Other factors
    • Fat-containing nodules are virtually always benign (hamartomas) - malignancies could theoretically be lipomas or RCC mets but very rare
    • Benign features - well-defined, smooth, round
    • Pulmonary lymph nodes - small, solid, polygonal, perifissural, oval, pleural/septal/vessel attachment
    • Halo and reverse halo signs are non-specific and can be seen in both benign and malignant lesions
  • Classification
    • Solid
    • Subsolid
      • Subtypes
        • Pure ground-glass nodules
        • Part-solid/mixed nodules
      • Many subsolid nodules are inflammatory
      • Persistent ground-glass lesions carry a high risk of neoplasm
      • Mixed nodules are highest risk, with a higher solid component meaning higher risk of invasive cancer
  • CT without contrast, thin slice
    • 8-51% of CT shows a lung nodule
    • Features
      • Size
      • Attenuation
      • Growth or stable size
        • Growing nodules (>2mm) should be examined pathologically
      • Calcification and fat
  • PET
    • Best way to evaluate metabolism of indeterminate nodules
    • Solid nodules measuring >8mm that are not FDG avid are likely to be benign
    • SUV >2.5 is typically used to detect lesions with a high probability of malignancy
    • Not as good for subsolid nodules - be aware that slow-growing tumours (adenocarcinomas, carcinoids, low-grade lymphomas, metastases from renal cell carcinoma and mucinous neoplasms) can show little glucose uptake
    • Inflammatory lesions are difficult to differentiate from malignant processes on PET

Initial workup

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  • Assess risk of malignancy as low (<5%), intermediate (5-65%), or high (>65%)
    • This is most necessary for nodules 8-30mm in size, since management is generally identical for all nodules at either end of that range
    • High-risk features:
      • Smoking history (OR 7.9)
      • Older age
      • Female sex
      • Family history lung cancer
      • Emphysema
      • Larger nodule size
      • Location of nodule in upper lobe
      • Part-solid nodule type
      • Lower nodule count
      • Spiculation
      • Prior malignancy (met unless proven otherwise)
      • Asbestos exposure
  • Assess with imaging


Factors that influence the management of nodules 8 to 30 mm in size

Factor Level CT scan surveillance PET imaging Nonsurgical biopsy VATS wedge resection
Clinical probability of lung cancer Very low (<5%) ++++
Low-moderate + +++ ++ +
High (<65%) (± staging) ++ ++++
Surgical risk Low ++ ++ ++ +++
High ++ +++ ++
Biopsy risk Low ++ +++ +++
High ++ +++ +
High suspicion of active infection or inflammation ++++ ++
Values and preferences Desires certainty + +++ ++++
Risk averse to procedure-related complications ++++ +++ ++
Poor adherence with follow-up +++ ++++

Specific guidance

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  • Size-based
    • Nodules >3cm should be treated as bronchogenic carcinoma until proven otherwise
    • Nodules <=8mm without documented growth are often followed with serial CT
    • Nodules <=5mm have a malignancy rate of 1%, whereas those >2cm have a rate of up to 82%
  • Growth-based
    • Volume doubling in <20 days is considered indicative of infectious or inflammatory processes
    • Volume doubling between 20 and 400 days is suspicious for malignancy
    • Stability over >400 days implies benign process (granuloma or hamartoma), and nodules stable over 2 years are considered clinically benign (beware that some adenocarcinomas can be very slow-growing - be more careful with subsolid lesions)
    • Malignant nodules can decrease in size due to necrosis/fibrosis, however all malignant lesions will grow over a long enough time period
  • Indeterminate lung nodules >1cm should be assessed with FDG-PET/CT
    • Likelihood of malignancy increases as SUV-max increases
    • Small lesions <1cm are challenging to pick up on PET
  • Solid lesions stable for 2 years and subsolid lesions stable for 5 years are likely to be benign, and can be signed off on
  • Recent pneumonia - repeat the scan in 4-6 weeks, provided no other concerning features
  • Lots of systemic features but small nodule - suspect metastases or lymphoma
  • Multiple nodules - consider metastatic disease, reaction to chemotherapy, secondary infection in immunosuppressed patients, other inflammatory process - if no concerning features, may be appropriate for repeat scan in 3-6 months

Management based on Fleischner guidelines (2017)

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  • Eligibility criteria
    • >35yo
    • Has never had known or suspected cancer at any site
    • Not immunosuppressed
  • Define risk status



Options for biopsy:

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  • Diagnostic bronchoscopy
    • Good for central lesions >20mm or for lesions with a visible bronchogram reaching into the nodule - yield 80% when these features are present, 34% when not
  • Navigational bronchoscopy
  • EBUS
  • Trans-thoracic needle aspiration
    • Risks:
      • PTX (overall 20-50%, requiring percutaneous drainage 10%)
      • Bleeding
      • Infection
      • Gas embolism
      • Tumour seeding
    • FEV1 >1L considered safe for biopsy, but beware of patients with pulmonary fibrosis who may have a lower reserve than predicted by FEV1
  • VATS and sub-lobar resection with frozen section
    • Indicated in peripheral lesions with high probability of malignant disease
    • For small lesions far from pleural surface, pre-operative localisation techniques can be used
    • Intra-operative USS can also help
  • VATS and lobectomy
  • Pneumonectomy
    • Should not be performed without a cancer diagnosis