## Correct Answer: B. T1c The TNM staging for lung cancer is based on the 8th edition AJCC/UICC classification, which is the current standard used in Indian oncology practice. The T (tumor) component is determined by tumor size and anatomical extent. A tumor measuring 2.5 cm falls into the **T1 category** (tumors ≤3 cm in greatest dimension). Within T1, there are three subcategories: T1a (≤1 cm), T1b (>1 cm to ≤2 cm), and **T1c (>2 cm to ≤3 cm)**. Since this patient's tumor is 2.5 cm, it exceeds 2 cm but remains ≤3 cm, placing it squarely in the T1c category. T2a tumors are larger (>3 cm to ≤4 cm) and represent a higher stage with worse prognosis. The distinction between T1 subcategories is clinically important in India, as it influences adjuvant therapy decisions and prognostic counseling. T1 tumors have better 5-year survival rates compared to T2 tumors, making accurate staging crucial for treatment planning. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. T2a** — This is wrong because T2a tumors measure >3 cm to ≤4 cm. A 2.5 cm tumor does not meet the size threshold for T2a. This option represents stage upstaging and would incorrectly suggest a worse prognosis and potentially unnecessary aggressive adjuvant therapy. NBE may use this to trap students who confuse the T1/T2 cutoff at 3 cm. **C. T1b** — This is wrong because T1b tumors measure >1 cm to ≤2 cm. A 2.5 cm tumor exceeds the upper limit of 2 cm for T1b. While this keeps the tumor in the T1 category, it understages the lesion. Students may select this if they misremember the T1b cutoff as 2.5 cm instead of 2 cm, a common NBE trap. **D. T1a** — This is wrong because T1a tumors measure ≤1 cm. A 2.5 cm tumor is significantly larger and does not fit this category. This represents severe understaging and would miss the true extent of disease. This option may trap students who confuse T1a with small peripheral nodules or ground-glass opacities seen on imaging. ## High-Yield Facts - **T1c lung cancer** = tumor >2 cm to ≤3 cm in greatest dimension (8th edition AJCC/UICC) - **T1/T2 cutoff** = 3 cm; tumors ≤3 cm are T1 (with a, b, c subcategories), >3 cm are T2 or higher - **T1 subcategories**: T1a (≤1 cm), T1b (>1 cm–≤2 cm), T1c (>2 cm–≤3 cm) — all have better prognosis than T2 - **5-year survival T1 vs T2**: T1 tumors have ~80% 5-year survival; T2a ~60%, reflecting the prognostic importance of accurate size-based staging - **Adjuvant therapy decision**: T1 tumors <4 cm typically do not require adjuvant chemotherapy unless high-risk features (poor differentiation, lymphovascular invasion) are present ## Mnemonics **T1 Size Ladder** T1a ≤1 | T1b >1–≤2 | T1c >2–≤3 | T2a >3–≤4. Remember: each step adds 1 cm; T1c is the 'ceiling' of T1 at 3 cm. **The 3 cm Rule** If tumor ≤3 cm → T1 (check subcategory by size). If >3 cm → T2 or higher. The 3 cm boundary is the critical T1/T2 divider. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair a 2.5 cm tumor with T2a to trap students who confuse the T1/T2 cutoff (3 cm) or who incorrectly think T1b extends to 2.5 cm. The precise size boundaries in TNM are a classic source of confusion. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian tertiary centers, accurate T staging determines whether a patient with early-stage lung cancer can be managed with surgery alone or requires adjuvant chemotherapy. A T1c tumor (2.5 cm) in a fit patient is often amenable to curative resection without adjuvant therapy, whereas T2a upstaging would trigger discussion of chemotherapy, significantly altering treatment burden and cost for Indian patients. _Reference: AJCC Cancer Staging Manual, 8th edition (TNM Classification for Lung Cancer); Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Chapter on Lung Cancer)_
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