In
NSCLC, the determination of stage is important in terms of therapeutic and
prognostic implications. Careful initial diagnostic evaluation to define the
location and to determine the extent of primary and metastatic tumor
involvement is critical for the appropriate care of patients.
In
general, symptoms, physical signs, laboratory findings, or perceived risk of
distant metastasis lead to an evaluation for distant metastatic disease.
Additional tests such as bone scans and computed tomography (CT)/magnetic
resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain may be performed if initial assessments
suggest metastases or if patients with stage III disease are under
consideration for aggressive local and combined modality treatments.
Stage
has a critical role in the selection of therapy. The stage of disease is based
on a combination of clinical factors and pathological factors.[1] The distinction between clinical stage and
pathological stage should be considered when evaluating reports of survival
outcome.
Procedures
used to determine staging include the following:
·
History.
·
Physical
examination.
·
Routine
laboratory evaluations.
·
Chest
x-ray.
·
Chest
CT scan with infusion of contrast material.
·
Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron
emission tomography (FDG-PET) scanning.
Procedures
used to obtain tissue samples include bronchoscopy, mediastinoscopy, or
anterior mediastinotomy. Pathological staging of NSCLC requires the following:
·
Examination
of the tumor.
·
Resection
margins.
·
Lymph
nodes.
Prognostic
and treatment decisions are based on some of the following factors:
·
Knowledge
of histologic type.
·
Tumor
size and location.
·
Involvement
of pleura.
·
Surgical
margins.
·
Status
and location of lymph nodes by station.
·
Tumor
grade.
·
Lymphovascular
invasion.
At
diagnosis, patients with NSCLC can be divided into the following three groups
that reflect both the extent of the disease and the treatment approach:
- Surgically resectable disease (generally
stage I, stage II, and selected stage III tumors).
o
Has
the best prognosis, which depends on a variety of tumor and host factors.
o
Patients
with resectable disease who have medical contraindications to surgery are
candidates for curative radiation therapy.
o
Postoperative
cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy may provide a survival advantage to
patients with resected stage II or stage IIIA NSCLC.
- Locally (T3–T4) and/or regionally (N2–N3)
advanced disease.
o
Has
a diverse natural history.
o
Selected
patients with locally advanced tumors may benefit from combined modality
treatments.
o
Patients
with unresectable or N2-N3 disease are treated with radiation therapy in
combination with chemotherapy.
o
Selected
patients with T3 or N2 disease can be treated effectively with surgical
resection and either preoperative or postoperative chemotherapy or
chemoradiation therapy.
- Distant metastatic disease (includes
distant metastases [M1] that were found at the time of diagnosis).
o
May
be treated with radiation therapy or chemotherapy for palliation of symptoms
from the primary tumor.
o
Patients
with good performance status, women, and patients with distant metastases
confined to a single site live longer than others.[2]
o
Platinum-based
chemotherapy has been associated with short-term palliation of symptoms and
with a survival advantage.
o
Currently,
no single chemotherapy regimen can be recommended for routine use.
o
Patients
previously treated with platinum combination chemotherapy may derive symptom
control and survival benefit from docetaxel, pemetrexed, or epidermal growth
factor receptor inhibitors.
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