Background: A time trend for characteristics and prognoses of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) who underwent surgical resection was investigated.
Methods: A series of 1123 consecutive patients with NSCLC who underwent surgical resection from 1975 to 1998 was reviewed with respect to changes in patient profile and surgical outcome among subgroups classified by clinicopathologic factors.
Results: With time, the proportion of female, elderly (> or =70 years), pathologic stage IA, nonsmoking, and adenocarcinoma patients increased significantly whereas pneumonectomy, incomplete resection, and pathologic stage IIIA patients decreased significantly. Overall survival showed an upward trend with 5-year survival rates of 30.0% in the 1970s, 41.6% in the 1980s, and 50.1% in the 1990s (P <.0001). This tendency was similar in every pathologic stage that was observed. The proportion of female patients with adenocarcinoma that exhibited the most favorable prognosis among subpopulations classified by gender and cell types was significantly higher in the 1990s (28.0%) than in the 1970s (14.0%). Multivariate analysis revealed that female gender, adenocarcinoma, complete resection, and early pathologic stage were independently favorable factors whereas advanced age was an unfavorable factor.
Conclusions: The improved survival following surgical resection for NSCLC during the study period was associated with an increasing population of female patients with adenocarcinoma, more detection of early disease, and effective elimination of unresectable cases.