Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Proper staging of Lung cancer is of paramount concern when determining a treatment regime. Currently the assessment of surgical candidacy is performed with the staging process, mainly the mediastinoscopy. A mediastinoscopy has the ability to access samples of the paratracheal lymph node stations (Levels 2R, 2L, 3, 4R, 4L), as well as the anterior subcarinal lymph node station (Level 7). In comparison, the EBUS-TBNA technique is a real-time procedure that has the potential to access the same paratracheal and subcarinal lymph node stations associated with the mediastinoscopy, but also extending out to the hilar lymph nodes (Levels 10 and 11). Because of the possibility of extended sampling range and a reduction in procedural invasiveness, EBUS-TBNA may represent a more efficient patient centered alternative to mediastinoscopy in the staging of lung cancer patients. Additionally, patients who are have lymph nodes in the N2 region frequently undergo chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy prior to surgery. Assessment of the lymph nodes after chemo/radiation is done using CT scans, as re-mediastinoscopy is a technically difficult procedure. These patients may benefit from EBUS-TBNA.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
A) Age 18 years or older B) Patients with confirmed or suspected non-small cell lung cancer who require a mediastinoscopy as part of their staging investigations of the mediastinum to determine suitability for lung cancer resection will be considered for the trial.
C) Patients with undiagnosed enlarged lymph nodes in the mediastinum suspicious for lung cancer in which a tissue diagnosis is required.
Exclusion criteria
A) Patients who are deemed on clinical grounds not to be medically fit for a bronchoscopy or a mediastinoscopy or who are not suitable for definitive surgical resection by thoracotomy will be excluded.
B) Patients who have verified stage IV disease or who are not appropriate for lung cancer resection by virtue of direct invasion of mediastinal structures or large parts of the chest wall.
C) Known small cell lung cancer. D) Patients where there is a high clinical suspicion of lymphoma. E) Inability to give informed consent.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
200 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal