Objective: To evaluate the role of video-assisted thoracoscopy (VAT) in the staging of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).
Methods: In 30 patients (18 male, 12 female, median age 62 (50-78) years) VAT was used to assess the operability of NSCLC in cases where doubt existed after conventional staging investigations had been performed.
Results: VAT was used to assess direct tumour invasion of adjacent organs in 17 patients (mediastinal invasion in 14 and chest wall invasion in 3 patients). In 4 patients with limited respiratory reserve, VAT confirmed the need only for lobectomy prior to thoracotomy. Mediastinal lymph node biopsy was performed in 5 patients with significant (> 1.5 cm) lymphadenopathy on CT scan. VAT was also used to assess bilateral lesions in 4 patients with suspected synchronous tumours. Conversion to thoracotomy was necessary in 4 patients for technical reasons. Successful resection was possible in 17 of the remaining 26 cases, while unnecessary thoracotomy was avoided in 9 patients (30%) with unresectable or benign disease. In 4 patients deemed inoperable on CT scan, VAT staging enabled subsequent resection.
Conclusions: Video-assisted thoracoscopy appears to have a complementary role in staging NSCLC when other methods are equivocal. It has the potential for increased sensitivity over conventional staging methods.