Solitary lung adenocarcinoma: follow-up CT, pathological-molecular characteristics, and surgical prognosis for different morphological classifications

Insights Imaging. 2023 Nov 27;14(1):209. doi: 10.1186/s13244-023-01563-x.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the dynamic changes during follow-up computed tomography (CT), histological subtypes, gene mutation status, and surgical prognosis for different morphological presentations of solitary lung adenocarcinomas (SLADC).

Materials and methods: This retrospective study compared dynamic tumor changes and volume doubling time (VDT) in 228 patients with SLADC (morphological types I-IV) who had intermittent growth during follow-ups. The correlation between the morphological classification and histological subtypes, gene mutation status, and surgical prognosis was evaluated.

Results: Among the 228 patients, 66 (28.9%) were classified as type I, 123 (53.9%) as type II, 16 (7%) as type III, and 23 (10.1%) as type IV. Type I had the shortest VDT (254 days), followed by types IV (381 days) and III (501 days), and then type II (993 days) (p < 0.05 each). Type I had a greater proportion of solid/micropapillary-predominant pattern than type II, and the lepidic-predominant pattern was more common in type II and III than in type I (p < 0.05 each). Furthermore, type II and IV SLADCs were correlated with positive epidermal growth factor receptor mutation (p < 0.05 each). Lastly, the Kaplan-Meier curves showed that the disease-free survival was longest for patients with type II tumors, followed by those with type III and IV tumors, and then those with type I tumors (p < 0.001 each).

Conclusion: A good understanding of the natural progression and pathological-molecular characteristics of different morphological SLADC types can help make accurate diagnoses, develop individual treatment strategies, and predict patient outcomes.

Critical relevance statement: A good understanding of the natural progression and pathological-molecular characteristics of different morphological solitary lung adenocarcinoma types can help make accurate diagnoses, develop individual treatment strategies, and predict patient outcomes.

Key points: • Type I-IV solitary lung adenocarcinomas exhibit varying natural progression on serial CT scans. • Morphological classification of solitary lung adenocarcinomas predicts histological subtype, gene status, and surgical prognosis. • This classification of solitary lung adenocarcinomas may help improve diagnostic, therapeutic, and prognosticating abilities.

Keywords: Computed tomography; Gene mutation; Histological subtype; Lung adenocarcinoma; Prognosis.