Non small cell lung cancer other diagnostic studies
Non Small Cell Lung Cancer Microchapters |
Differentiating Non Small Cell Lung Cancer from other Diseases |
---|
Diagnosis |
Treatment |
Case Studies |
Non small cell lung cancer other diagnostic studies On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Non small cell lung cancer other diagnostic studies |
Non small cell lung cancer other diagnostic studies in the news |
Blogs on Non small cell lung cancer other diagnostic studies |
Directions to Hospitals Treating Non small cell carcinoma of the lung |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Non small cell lung cancer other diagnostic studies |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Maria Fernanda Villarreal, M.D. [2]
Overview
Other diagnostic modalities for non-small cell lung cancer, include: thoracotomy, bronchoscopy, mediastinoscopy, and transthoracic percutaneous fine needle aspiration.
Other Diagnostic Studies
- Other diagnostic modalities for non-small cell lung cancer, include:
- Thoracotomy
- Bronchoscopy
- Mediastinoscopy
- Chamberlain procedure
- Left parasternal mediastinotomy
- Anterior mediastinotomy
- Transthoracic percutaneous fine needle aspiration
- The majority of these procedures allow staging of mediastinal lymph nodes.
- The table below demonstrates the different types of diagnostic modalities in non small cell lung cancer arranged from the most to the least invasive.
Procedure | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|
Thoracotomy | Allows the most thorough inspection and sampling of lymph node stations, may be followed by resection of tumor, if feasible | Most invasive approach, not indicated for staging alone, significant risk of procedure-related morbidity |
Left parasternal mediastinotomy (or anterior mediastinotomy) | Permits evaluation of the aortopulmonary window lymph nodes | More invasive; false-negative rate approximately 10%. |
Chamberlain procedure | Access to station 5 (aortopulmonary window lymph node) | Limited applications, invasive |
Cervical mediastinoscopy | Still considered the gold standard (usual comparitor) by many, excellent for 2RL 4RL | Does not cover all medastinal lymph node stations, particularly subcarinal lymph nodes (station 7), paraesophageal and pulmonary ligament lymph nodes (stations 8 and 9), the aortopulmonary window lymph nodes (station 5), and the anterior mediastinal lymph nodes (station 6); false-negative rate approximately 20%; invasive |
Video-assisted thoracoscopy | Good for inferior mediastinum, station 5 and 6 lymph nodes | Invasive, does not cover superior anterior mediastinum |
Transthoracic percutaneous fine needle aspiration (FNA) under CT guidance | More widely available than some other methods | Traverses a lot of lung tissue, therefore high pneumothorax risk, some lymph node stations inaccessible |
Bronchoscopy with blind transbronchial FNA (Wang needle) | Less invasive than above methods | Relatively low yield, not widely practiced, bleeding risk |