Dr. Shirish Gadgeel on Managing Locally Advanced NSCLC

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Our next podcast slide presentation comes from Dr. Shirish Gadgeel, medical oncologist at Wayne State University in Detroit. He came out to Seattle for a physician education program I run and was kind enough to stay for our NSCLC Patient Education Forum, where he spoke on our Current Standards of Care for Locally Advanced (Stage III) NSCLC.

Here's his presentation in audio and video formats, along with the transcript and copies of the slides.

Managing Locally Advanced NSCLC: Summary from a Talk to Patients & Caregivers

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Here is the third portion of a talk I did at the Seattle-based non-profit Cancer Lifeline in May, and this section focuses on our current standards for managing unresectable locally advanced (stage III NSCLC). This covers theissues of sequential vs. concurrent chemo with radiation and the important issue of whether additional consolidation chemo after the radiation is feasible and advisable. It also covers the emerging key trials being done in this treatment setting.

Video Presentation on Management Options for Stage IIIA NSCLC

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With special thanks to the support of the Lung Cancer Connection and longtime member and friend of GRACE Myrtle Chidester, I am very happy to offer a new video podcast presentation on one of the most controversial and interesting areas of lung cancer management. Stage IIIA NSCLC with N2 mediastinal node involvement generates debates among the experts as well as at local hospital tumor boards everywhere, on a weekly basis.

Treatment of Locally-Advanced NSCLC in the Elderly: As Individualized as Medicine Gets

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“Locally-advanced NSCLC” is a term generally applied to lung cancers with tumors that have either grown into major structures (such as vertebrae or spine bones, the central airways, or involve the main blood vessels supplying the lung or central chest) or those cancers that have spread to lymph nodes in the central chest (the mediastinum). In the case of many of these cancers, removing them with surgery is not possible, but treatment with the combination of chemotherapy and radiation given at the same time may be used with the goal of curing the cancer.

Prophylactic Cranial Irradiation for Stage III NSCLC: Some Answers, Some Open Questions

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In my last few weeks as a GRACE guest faculty, I have been struck by the number of forum discussions that deal with brain metastases. Brain metastases are a growing problem in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), as well as in multiple other cancers. Why is this? Twenty years ago, patients who developed brain metastases were usually at the end-stage of their cancer, with widely metastatic disease and few systemic treatment options. The prognosis for these patients was very poor, but not really because of the brain metastases.

Interview with Dr. Suresh Ramalingam: Current Standards and Controversies in Locally Advanced NSCLC

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Dr. Suresh Ramalingam is a longtime friend of mine and a national leader in the field of lung cancer. He is the Director of the Lung Cancer Program at the Winship Cancer Institute at Emory University in Atlanta, and he was kind enough to sit down with me to talk about his perspective on the current optimal treatment for patients with stage III, or locally advanced, NSCLC. We also spoke about managing metastatic disease, which will be covered in a separate podcast. It's an audio interview, but if people watch the video version, there are some figures synchronized with the discussion.

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