# Optimizing Lymph Node Staging in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Surgery: Evidence, Guidelines, and Quality Improvement Strategies

**Authors:** Dimitrios E. Magouliotis, Vasiliki Androutsopoulou, Ugo Cioffi, Fabrizio Minervini, Noah Sicouri, Andrew Xanthopoulos, Marco Scarci

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15020831 · 2026-01-20

## TL;DR

This paper reviews how to improve lymph node staging in lung cancer surgery to ensure accurate diagnosis and better patient outcomes.

## Contribution

The paper provides a practical framework for implementing high-quality lymph node staging in lung cancer surgery based on current evidence and guidelines.

## Key findings

- Inadequate lymph node evaluation is linked to worse survival and higher recurrence rates in NSCLC patients.
- Station-based lymph node assessment improves staging accuracy and patient outcomes compared to absolute node counts.
- Quality improvement strategies like checklists and standardized specimen handling enhance guideline adherence.

## Abstract

Lymph node evaluation is a central determinant of oncologic quality in the surgical management of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Accurate assessment of hilar and mediastinal lymph nodes underpins pathologic staging, informs postoperative treatment decisions, and remains essential for prognostic stratification and assessment of resection completeness. Although international guidelines provide clear recommendations, real-world data consistently demonstrate substantial variability in lymph node staging practices, with inadequate evaluation frequently observed across institutions and surgical settings. Insufficient nodal assessment, manifested as the omission of mediastinal staging, limited station sampling, or low lymph node yield, is associated with reduced nodal upstaging, inappropriate omission of adjuvant therapy, higher recurrence rates, and inferior long-term survival. Contemporary guidance from major societies, including the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, European Society of Thoracic Surgeons, International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer, and the Commission on Cancer, has increasingly converged on a station-based definition of adequacy, emphasizing systematic evaluation of both N1 and N2 nodal stations rather than reliance on absolute node counts alone. In parallel, preoperative mediastinal staging algorithms have evolved toward routine use of endobronchial and esophageal ultrasound as first-line invasive modalities, reserving surgical mediastinoscopy for selected high-risk or inconclusive cases. Evidence from randomized trials, population-level databases, and meta-analyses indicates that thorough nodal assessment improves staging accuracy and survival, while recent data support the selective use of lobe-specific or tailored lymphadenectomy in carefully staged, low-risk early disease. Finally, emerging quality improvement interventions, including standardized specimen handling, operative checklists, and multidisciplinary feedback mechanisms, have demonstrated measurable improvements in guideline adherence and patient outcomes. This narrative review integrates contemporary evidence and guideline recommendations to outline a practical framework for implementing reliable, high-quality lymph node staging in modern lung cancer surgery.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** non-small-cell lung cancer (MONDO:0005233), NSCLC (MONDO:0005233)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** NSCLC (MESH:D002289), Lung Cancer (MESH:D008175), Cancer (MESH:D009369)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842253/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12842253