Background: The treatment strategy for patients with non-small cell lung cancer and clinically negative, but surgically detected mediastinal lymph node metastasis (surgically discovered N2 disease) is controversial.
Methods: From August 1979 through December 1994, 53 patients with non-small cell lung cancer were found to have surgically discovered N2 disease. We retrospectively studied the clinical characteristics and the factors that influenced the prognosis in these patients.
Results: The 3-year and 5-year survival rates and the median survival for the 53 patients with surgically discovered N2 disease were 44%, 21%, and 26 months. Two thirds of the patients had adenocarcinoma. Only complete resection affected long-term survival; adjuvant therapy had no effect on survival. In regard to lymph node status, a single metastatic focus in the aortic area was associated with long-term survival.
Conclusions: Patients with adenocarcinoma may require histologic determination of N2 disease. Complete resection, including extensive and complete mediastinal lymph node dissection, is warranted in patients with surgically discovered N2 disease. In particular, when the aortic lymph node (including stations 5 and 6) alone is involved, the patients should undergo as complete a resection as possible.