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- Nicholson, Andrew G5
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Editors Choice
5 Results
- Original Article Translational OncologyOpen Archive
The IASLC Lung Cancer Staging Project: Analysis of Resection Margin Status and Proposals for Residual Tumor Descriptors for Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer
Journal of Thoracic OncologyVol. 15Issue 3p344–359Published online: November 12, 2019- John G. Edwards
- Kari Chansky
- Paul Van Schil
- Andrew G. Nicholson
- Souheil Boubia
- Elisabeth Brambilla
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 51Our aim was to validate the prognostic relevance in NSCLC of potential residual tumor (R) descriptors, including the proposed International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer definition for uncertain resection, referred to as R(un). - Original Article IASLC Staging Committee ArticleOpen Archive
The IASLC Lung Cancer Staging Project: Background Data and Proposed Criteria to Distinguish Separate Primary Lung Cancers from Metastatic Foci in Patients with Two Lung Tumors in the Forthcoming Eighth Edition of the TNM Classification for Lung Cancer
Journal of Thoracic OncologyVol. 11Issue 5p651–665Published online: March 1, 2016- Frank C. Detterbeck
- Wilbur A. Franklin
- Andrew G. Nicholson
- Nicolas Girard
- Douglas A. Arenberg
- William D. Travis
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 155It can be difficult to distinguish between a second primary and a metastasis in patients with lung cancer who have more than one pulmonary site of cancer. - Original Article IASLC Staging Committee ArticleOpen Archive
The IASLC Lung Cancer Staging Project: Background Data and Proposals for the Application of TNM Staging Rules to Lung Cancer Presenting as Multiple Nodules with Ground Glass or Lepidic Features or a Pneumonic Type of Involvement in the Forthcoming Eighth Edition of the TNM Classification
Journal of Thoracic OncologyVol. 11Issue 5p666–680Published online: February 29, 2016- Frank C. Detterbeck
- Edith M. Marom
- Douglas A. Arenberg
- Wilbur A. Franklin
- Andrew G. Nicholson
- William D. Travis
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 120Application of tumor, node, and metastasis (TNM) classification is difficult in patients with lung cancer presenting as multiple ground glass nodules or with diffuse pneumonic-type involvement. Clarification of how to do this is needed for the forthcoming eighth edition of TNM classification. - Original Article IASLC Staging Committee ArticleOpen Archive
The IASLC Lung Cancer Staging Project: Background Data and Proposals for the Classification of Lung Cancer with Separate Tumor Nodules in the Forthcoming Eighth Edition of the TNM Classification for Lung Cancer
Journal of Thoracic OncologyVol. 11Issue 5p681–692Published online: February 29, 2016- Frank C. Detterbeck
- Vanessa Bolejack
- Douglas A. Arenberg
- John Crowley
- Jessica S. Donington
- Wilbur A. Franklin
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 81Separate tumor nodules with the same histologic appearance occur in the lungs in a small proportion of patients with primary lung cancer. This article addresses how such tumors can be classified to inform the eighth edition of the anatomic classification of lung cancer. Separate tumor nodules should be distinguished from second primary lung cancer, multifocal ground glass/lepidic tumors, and pneumonic-type lung cancer, which are addressed in separate analyses. - Original Article IASLC Staging Committee ArticleOpen Archive
The IASLC Lung Cancer Staging Project: Summary of Proposals for Revisions of the Classification of Lung Cancers with Multiple Pulmonary Sites of Involvement in the Forthcoming Eighth Edition of the TNM Classification
Journal of Thoracic OncologyVol. 11Issue 5p639–650Published online: February 29, 2016- Frank C. Detterbeck
- Andrew G. Nicholson
- Wilbur A. Franklin
- Edith M. Marom
- William D. Travis
- Nicolas Girard
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 129Patients with lung cancer who harbor multiple pulmonary sites of disease have been challenging to classify; a subcommittee of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer Staging and Prognostic Factors Committee was charged with developing proposals for the eighth edition of the tumor, node, and metastasis (TNM) classification to address this issue.