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As I described in a prior post, pre-operative chemo and radiation are one very reasonable, aggressive option for stage IIIA NSCLC, particularly if the mediastinal lymph nodes involved are not large and there is only a single lymph node area involved.
As I noted in prior posts on the subject of unresectable stage III NSCLC, there is a general consensus that overlapping chemo and radiation is associated with better cure rates for this stage of locally advanced NSCLC than doing one followed by the other. At the same time, however, the overlapping, or concurrent chemo and radiation approach is associated with more challenges in terms of side effects, particularly esophagitis, as well as greater drops in blood counts, and potentially more inflammation in the lungs, or pneumonitis.
The oral EGFR inhibitors Iressa and Tarceva both have activity in advanced NSCLC, with proven responses in a minority of patients and improvements in cancer-related symptoms as well.
Prophylactic cranial irradiation, or PCI, for SCLC, usually limited disease (LD-SCLC), remains a controversial issue, although this is generally recommended for patients with LD-SCLC who have a complete response to treatment (no evidence of disease). However, the idea of radiating the brain of someone who has no evidence of cancer there and may never get it is something that many patients and also some oncologists (radiation oncologists and medical oncologists) may not embrace.
While SCLC accounts for only about 13% of lung cancer, and only approximately one third of patients with SCLC have limited disease SCLC (LD-SCLC), this remains a high stakes area with the potential for being cured, so it needs to be treated as optimally as possible. I'm going to give a brief history and highlight some of the current principles of what has developed as the current standard of care.
After several weeks of posts on other aspects of lung cancer, I am long overdue to write on small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Although it is good to see the number of SCLC cases decreasing over time, and becoming a smaller and smaller percentage of lung cancer cases overall (only about 13% in the US and steadily falling), this has translated into fewer clinical trials and less of a focus on SCLC in the lung cancer community. However, there are some promising developments that may lead to some long overdue progress in the field.
Stage IIIA NSCLC, particularly with N2 lymph node involvement, is probably the NSCLC treatment setting that is most controversial. While it is the latest stage that we routinely consider surgery for, it is actively debated whether patients with stage IIIA NSCLC should have surgery or be treated with a combination of chemo and radiation without surgery.
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.