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Treatment of Early Stage Lung Cancer by VATS Versus OPEN Lobectomy

N/AUnknownNCT01933828
Radboud University Medical Center176 enrolled

Overview

In patients with early stage lung cancer surgical lobectomy is the treatment of choice. A resection by Video-assisted Thoracic Surgery (VATS) is probably superior to an open procedure by thoracotomy for patients with early stage lung cancer, but randomized evidence for superiority is lacking. Furthermore, VATS lobectomy has not gained broad implementation yet. The objective of this study is to assess the benefits of VATS- over open lobectomy regarding quality of life and costs in a prospective randomized controlled multicenter trial. All patients meeting the inclusion criteria that are not randomized will be included in a prospective Cohort.

Rationale: Surgical lobectomy is the treatment of choice for patients with early stage lung cancer. In some centres, video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) lobectomy is preferred, where other centres hold on to the conventional open lobectomy via a thoracotomy. Although several studies have demonstrated fewer postoperative complications and shorter hospital length of stay for the VATS procedure, others have reported concerns regarding oncologic equivalence, mainly based on incomplete lymph node staging. Convincing randomized evidence from the literature is lacking. The aim of this randomized multicentre study is to compare quality of life, oncologic endpoints and cost-effectiveness between VATS- and open (thoracotomy) lobectomy. Objective: To compare quality of life, cost-effectiveness and number of dissected mediastinal lymph nodes between open,VATS and ROBOT-assisted lobectomy. Study design: A prospective multi-centre randomized trial with a prospective registry arm Study population: Adult patients of either gender, selected by the pulmonary oncological multidisciplinary team to undergo surgical lobectomy for early-stage lung carcinoma. Intervention: One group is assigned to the open procedure: posterolateral thoracotomy for lobectomy with mediastinal lymph node dissection. The other group is assigned to the VATS procedure: thoracoscopic minimally invasive lobectomy with thoracoscopic mediastinal lymph node dissection. All patients that do meet the inclusion criteria but are not participating in the randomized trial can be included in the prospective Cohort arm of the study evaluating clinical assignment to OPEN- VATS or ROBOT-assisted lobectomy. Main study parameters/endpoints: Primary endpoints are postoperative quality of life, and hospital length of stay. Secondary endpoints include cancer specific quality of life, number of dissected mediastinal lymph nodes and stations, procedural complication rates, pulmonary function, overall costs and survival. Centres participating in this study currently perform the open- and VATS and/or ROBOT-assisted lobectomy in daily clinical practice.

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Allocation

RANDOMIZED

Purpose

TREATMENT

Masking

SINGLE

Enrollment

176

Conditions

Lung Cancer

Interventions

OPEN lobectomyPROCEDURE

Lobectomy and mediastinal lymph node dissection by thoracotomy with rib-spreading.

VATS lobectomyPROCEDURE

Thoracoscopic minimally invasive lobectomy with thoracoscopic mediastinal lymph node dissection without rib-spreading.

ROBOT-assisted lobectomyDEVICE

Robot-assisted lobectomy with mediastinal lymph node dissection (Robot group as clinical assignment in prospective Cohort).

Eligibility

Sex: ALLMin age: 18 Years
Medical Language ↔ Plain English
Inclusion Criteria: * Non-small cell lung carcinoma, pathologically confirmed or strong suspicion based on imaging. * T1 or T2a (≤ 5 cm) on computer tomography (CT). * Primary aim is lobectomy. * Tumor not in close relation to the hilar structures (bronchus,vessels)based on CT. * Clinically staged N0 (no regional lymph node metastasis) or N1 (metastasis to ipsilateral, hilar, interlobar- and/or intrapulmonary lymph nodes), M0 (no distant metastasis) after clinical staging according to the current Dutch guideline (may 2011). Exclusion Criteria: * T2b, T3 or T4 tumor (7th guideline TNM classification NSCLC). * Mediastinal lymph node metastasis (N2, N3). * Distant metastasis (M1). * Previous thoracic surgery on same side. * Pneumonectomy as primary aim.

Locations (1)

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Department of Cardio-thoracic Surgery

Nijmegen, Netherlands

RECRUITING

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Quality of life (EQ5D)

Primary endpoints include Quality of life assessed by EQ5D for VATS versus open lobectomy in patients with early stage non small cell lung carcinoma.

Time frame: up to12 month

Hospital length of stay

Time frame: day of discharge from hospital after surgery (expected within 2 weeks).

Secondary Outcomes

cancer specific quality of life (QLQ C30 and 13)

Time frame: preoperatively 1 week before surgery and at 3-6 and 12 month

number of dissected mediastinal lymphnode stations

The number of intraoperatively dissected mediastinal lymphnode stations is assessed as a secondary oncologic outcome measure.

Time frame: day 0 (intraoperatively)

composite endpoint of intra- and postoperative complications

This secondary composite endpoints include conversion rate, bleeding, air leakage, pain, cardiac arrhythmias, wound infection, pulmonary complications, pulmonary function.

Time frame: form the day of surgery up to discharege (expected within 2 weeks)

Central Contacts

Thomas J van Brakel, MD, PhD

CONTACT

+ 31 24 361 47 44t.vanbrakel@ctc.umcn.nl
Data from ClinicalTrials.gov

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