Treating Elderly and Poorer Performance Status Patients with Small Cell Lung Cancer
The fact is that lung cancer, like many others, is a disease disproportionately affecting older populations, with the median age now in the 69-70 range.
The fact is that lung cancer, like many others, is a disease disproportionately affecting older populations, with the median age now in the 69-70 range.
Staging in lung cancer, as well has two categories, clinical and pathologic. The clinical staging is based on what appears on scans like the CT and PET scan that are now pretty routine parts of the staging workup. Our scans are better than ever before, but some lymph nodes with cancer involvement are not enlarged and have no visible abnormalities, and no scan can pick up lesions that are only visible as a small collection of cancer cells under a microscope.
I recently received a question on the Q&A Forum about the use of cisplatin vs. carboplatin in SCLC. In contrast to the smoldering debate about cisplatin vs. carboplatin in NSCLC that I described in a recent post, there's been very little study and not as much debate about SCLC.
The question of whether to use cisplatin or carboplatin in our "platinum-based chemotherapy doublets" that are the most common treatment for the first-line treatment of NSCLC has been a smoldering debate in lung cancer for more than a decade. Although at this point carboplatin is by far and away more commonly used than the generally less tolerable cisplatin, whether these are completely identical in their efficacy isn't entirely clear. Nobody questions that they're very close.
I've recently received some questions about the advantages and disadvantages of maintenance Avastin as a single agent for patients after completion of 6 cycles of first line chemo and avastin together for avastin-eligible patients. While this is generally considered to be a standard of care, many oncologists question whether it should be done. It's worth looking at how that standard came about and the strength of the evidence for it.
So far, I've only written a few introductory posts on mesothelioma, but there were some interesting presentations at ASCO 2007 about the topic. One described the results of an expanded access protocol (EAP), which is when a company gives free access to a drug that is not yet commercially available (generally in exchange for participation in a data-collection study).
Over the past few years, sex-based differences in lung cancer have become increasingly recognized as relevant in prognosis overall and potentially in predicting response to treatment, such as EGFR inhibitors and other targeted therapies. At ASCO 2007, a group led by Dr.
NOTE: ALL FIGURES CAN BE SEEN BY DOUBLE-CLICKING ON THEM, EVEN THOUGH NOT ALL APPEAR AS THUMBNAIL VIEWS PROPERLY.
As a follow-up to my last post and an end to this extended discusison of locally advanced NSCLC before moving to other topics, I'll just cover some more recent work on the topic of chemo followed by chemo and radiation for stage III NSCLC. In that post, I showed that over the past several years, we hadn't seen the promise of this induction strategy in small trials translate into especially favorable results in larger multicenter trials.
The last topic in our discussion of the evolving field of optimal treatment for locally advanced NSCLC is the potential role for induction chemotherapy before radiation, or, more commonly concurrent chemo/radiation (CT/RT).
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