ObjectiveTo explore the imaging characteristics of lung cancers associated with cystic airspaces (LCCA) and the effects of different treatment regimens. MethodsA retrospective analysis was conducted on the clinical and radiological data of LCCA patients who underwent surgical resection and pathological confirmation at the Department of Thoracic Surgery, the First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University from 2016 to 2023. The relationship between various radiological classifications and clinical pathology was studied. Based on the postoperative adjuvant treatment follow-up results, the effects of different treatment regimens were analyzed. ResultsA total of 147 patients were included, including 90 males and 57 females, with a median age of 63 (55, 70) years. There were 21 patients of imaging typeⅠ, 50 patients of typeⅡ, 57 patients of type Ⅲ, and 19 patients of type Ⅳ. The lobulation sign or burr sign of typeⅠcyst walls (P=0.004), and intracystic septa (P=0.030) were more commonly seen in the high-aggressiveness group. The components of the cyst walls or nodules of types Ⅰ-Ⅳ in the high-aggressiveness group were mostly solid or sub-solid (P<0.05). Multivariate logistic regression analysis indicated that subsolid cyst wall (OR=4.734, P=0.023), solid cyst wall (OR=97.972, P<0.001), and the lobulation sign or burr sign of the cyst wall (OR=13.215, P=0.024) were independent risk factors for aggressiveness. Fifty-eight patients received adjuvant therapy after surgery, including 22 in the chemotherapy group, 15 in the targeted therapy group, and 21 in the combined therapy group. The progression-free survival of the combined therapy group was better than the other two groups (P=0.045). ConclusionThere is a correlation between the imaging features of LCCA and pathological aggressiveness. Compared to postoperative targeted therapy or chemotherapy alone, postoperative chemotherapy combined with targeted therapy can improve the progression-free survival of LCCA patients.
Lung cancer is the malignant tumor with the highest global incidence and mortality rates. With the widespread application of chest CT, its detection rate has shown a gradual upward trend. Early-stage lung cancer lesions typically appear on chest CT as pure ground-glass nodules, solid nodules, and mixed ground-glass nodules. Lung cancer associated with cystic airspaces (LCCA), as a subtype with distinctive imaging features, is also being detected with increasing frequency. Pathologically, LCCA is predominantly adenocarcinoma or squamous cell carcinoma, often characterized by thick walls, solid components, and necrotic tissue, suggesting a more aggressive behavior. Given that the early imaging manifestations of LCCA lack specificity, it is prone to clinical misdiagnosis as benign conditions such as pulmonary infection, pulmonary bullae, or tuberculosis, leading to missed or incorrect diagnosis. Currently, related research primarily focuses on its pathogenesis, imaging morphology, and diagnosis, while systematic investigation into its clinical treatment strategies and prognosis remains insufficient. Therefore, this article provides a review of recent research advances in the pathogenesis, imaging features, radiomics and histopathological characteristics, diagnosis, genetic mutation profiles, as well as treatment and prognosis of LCCA.