Published online Jun 6, 2020. doi: 10.12998/wjcc.v8.i11.2227
Peer-review started: March 22, 2020
First decision: April 19, 2020
Revised: April 24, 2020
Accepted: May 21, 2020
Article in press: May 21, 2020
Published online: June 6, 2020
Processing time: 77 Days and 16.4 Hours
Small pulmonary nodules are tissue shadows and thoracoscopic segmentectomy in China is still at the exploratory stage with limited application.
To evaluate the efficacy of thoracoscopic anatomical segmentectomy for small pulmonary nodules.
Medical records of 86 patients with small pulmonary nodules treated at our hospital between August 2016 and October 2019 were retrospectively analyzed; 40 cases who underwent thoracoscopic lobectomy were set as a reference group, and 46 cases who underwent thoracoscopic anatomical segmentectomy were set as an observation group. Preoperative and postoperative parameters were measured in both groups, including the percentage of forced expiratory volume in the first second (FEV1%), the percentage of forced vital capacity (FVC%), and the FEV1/FVC ratio (FEV1/FVC). Patients with positive pathological diagnosis received tests for neuron-specific enolase, carbohydrate antigen 125 (CA125), CA19-9, and squamous cell carcinoma antigen. Intraoperative bleeding volume, drainage volume, the number of dissected lymph nodes, drainage time, hospital stay, treatment cost, postoperative complications, and postoperative pain condition were compared between the two groups.
No significant difference was observed in the results of four serum tumor marker (CA125, CA19-9, squamous cell carcinoma antigen, and neuron-specific enolase), the number of dissected lymph nodes, treatment cost, or preoperative pulmonary ventilation index between the two groups. Intraoperative bleeding volume, drainage volume, drainage time, hospital stay, and visual analogue scale score were significantly lower in the observation group (P < 0.05). The results of FEV1%, FVC%, and FEV1/FVC were significantly higher in the observation group (P < 0.05).
The efficacy of thoracoscopic anatomical segmentectomy and lobectomy for small pulmonary nodules shows no significant difference in terms of lesion removal, but anatomical segmentectomy is less invasive with fewer postoperative complications and less influence on lung function.
Core tip: To evaluate the efficacy of thoracoscopic anatomical segmentectomy for small pulmonary nodules, this study retrospectively analyzed the medical records of 86 patients with small pulmonary nodules treated at our hospital.