Results of Surgical Treatment of Lung Cancer in Patients of Different Age Groups

0301 basic medicine 03 medical and health sciences postoperative complications R Medicine pneumonectomy non-small cell lung cancer concomitant diseases 3. Good health
DOI: 10.21103/article7(2)_shc1 Publication Date: 2017-06-16T21:59:15Z
ABSTRACT
Background: Lung cancer is one of the most common cancers in the world. The main objective of our study was to analyze the results of the surgical treatment of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in patients of different age groups. Methods and Results: We examined 280 patients (262/93.6% men and 18/6.4% women) aged from 39 to 75 years with NSCLC who underwent surgical treatment in the Ulyanovsk Regional Oncology Center in the period from 2010 to 2016. The mean age of patients was 64.9±10.1 years. Concomitant diseases were identified in 256(91.4%) patients: cardiovascular diseases in 170(60.7%), COPD in 147 (52.5%), lower extremity peripheral artery disease (stages II and III chronic ischemia) in 49(17.5%), a combination of concomitant pathology in 110(39.3%) patients. A total of 85(30.4%) pneumonectomies were performed, 56 of them in patients of young and middle age. Among early postoperative complications, the most frequent complications were purulent-inflammatory complications of the soft tissues of wounds (38.5%) and bronchopleural fistula (31.1%). The most severe complications, such as myocardial infarction, acute stroke, and acute limb ischemia, developed in patients with concomitant cardiovascular diseases, which caused the postoperative mortality of 4.6%. Conclusion: There were no statistically significant differences in the structure of complications depending on sex and age.
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