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At long last, and after years of planning, a new large phase III randomized clinical trial is getting underway to determine whether adding avastin to chemotherapy as post-operative (adjuvant) treatment for early stage NSCLC provides added benefit compared to chemotherapy alone.
In my last post I covered much of the controversy about whether patients with stage IIIA, N2-node positive NSCLC should be treated with induction therapy (chemotherapy or chemo/radiation) followed by surgery, or an alternative approach of chemo along with radiation delivered at a definitive dose (curative, not just the supplemental, lower doses used in induction therapy).
It's over, and I won (did you doubt me?).
I'm heading off today to Hawaii (Maui), which I must hasten to add is for a conference, the Eighth International Lung Cancer Congress, not just a vacation, although working in Hawaii often seems better than time off at home. The meeting not only includes a lot of good lectures and debates, but it gives us the opportunity to actually discuss the importance and implications of the trials that were just presented a few weeks before at ASCO.
While post-operative chemotherapy has emerged as the standard treatment for patients with stage II and resected IIIA NSCLCC, and some patients with stage IB disease, trials conducted over the past few years are providing information about the option of treating with initial chemotherapy before surgery. A couple of trials were presented at ASCO this year that did not demonstrate a significant survival benefit of pre-operative chemo compared with no treatment.
Over the last several years, chemotherapy after surgery has become the standard strategy for improving survival compared to surgery alone, at least for stage II and IIIA patients who don't have mediastinal (N2) lymph nodes involved, and it's often used also for patients with stage IB NSCLC (no lymph nodes, but a larger tumor or tumor involvement with the pleural lining around the lung). However, another approach that has been studied, albeit less so than adjuvant (post-operative) chemotherapy is neoadjuvant (pre-operative, also known as induction) chemotherapy.
I briefly mentioned the potential value of surgery for a solitary brain metastasis, where it is commonly used, in another post. Today I'll talk more specifically about where the role for surgery has been specifically tested for brain metastases in lung cancer.
We'll cover the general management principles for the more typical situation of patients with multiple brain metastases from lung cancer soon, but today we’ll cover the special situation of the patient who has a brain metastasis identified as the ONLY area of metastatic disease (generally referring to NSCLC, since SCLC has such a high tendency to spread distantly early in its history). Recall that metastatic, or stage IV, lung cancer, is treated with a palliative approach, due to the inability to achieve prolonged survival except in very rare cases.
The notorious and always welcomed words after surgery are, "we got it all", providing great relief to the patients and families who hear the phrase. We know that surgeons can take out all identifiable disease that they see when they do surgery, and that there is no evidence of visible disease on CT scans or on newer imaging techniques like PET scans. But why do we see that approximately 30% of patients with stage I NSCLC or about 50% of patients with stage II NSCLC recur?
There is still plenty of active debate about whether patients with stage III NSCLC who have mediastinal lymph nodes, the ones in the middle of the chest between the lungs but on the same side as the main tumor, should receive surgery in some circumstances or not.
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.