Treatment Option Overview for NSCLC
·
In NSCLC,
results of standard treatment are poor except for the most localized cancers.
All newly diagnosed patients with NSCLC are potential candidates for studies
evaluating new forms of treatment.
Surgery is
the most potentially curative therapeutic option for this disease.
Postoperative chemotherapy may provide an additional benefit to patients with
resected NSCLC. Radiation therapy combined with chemotherapy can produce a cure
in a small number of patients and can provide palliation in most patients.
Prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI) may reduce the incidence of brain
metastases, but there is no evidence of a survival benefit and the effect of
PCI on quality of life is not known.[1,2] In patients with advanced-stage disease,
chemotherapy or epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) kinase inhibitors offer
modest improvements in median survival, though overall survival is poor.[3,4]
Chemotherapy
has produced short-term improvement in disease-related symptoms in patients
with advanced NSCLC. Several clinical trials have attempted to assess the
impact of chemotherapy on tumor-related symptoms and quality of life. In total,
these studies suggest that tumor-related symptoms may be controlled by
chemotherapy without adversely affecting overall quality of life;[5,6] however, the impact of chemotherapy on
quality of life requires more study. In general, medically fit elderly patients
with good performance status obtain the same benefits from treatment as younger
patients.
The
identification of mutations in lung cancer has led to the development of
molecularly targeted therapy to improve the survival of subsets of patients
with metastatic disease.[7] In particular, genetic abnormalities in EGFR, MAPK, PI3K signaling pathways in subsets of NSCLC
may define mechanisms of drug sensitivity and primary or acquired resistance to
kinase inhibitors. EGFR mutations strongly predict the
improved response rate and progression-free survival of inhibitors of EGFR.
Fusions ofALK with EML4 genes form translocation products that
occur in ranges from 3% to 7% in unselected NSCLC and are responsive to
pharmacological inhibition of ALK by agents such as crizotinib. METoncogene
encodes hepatocyte growth factor receptor. Amplification of this gene has been
associated with secondary resistance to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors.
The
standard treatment options for each stage of NSCLC are presented in Table 11.
Table 11.
Standard Treatment Options for NSCLC
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Stage
(TNM Staging
Criteria)
|
Standard
Treatment Options
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Occult NSCLC
|
Surgery
|
|
Stage 0 NSCLC
|
Surgery
|
|
Endobronchial
therapies
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Stages IA and IB NSCLC
|
Surgery
|
|
Radiation therapy
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Stages IIA and IIB NSCLC
|
Surgery
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Neoadjuvant
chemotherapy
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Adjuvant
chemotherapy
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Radiation therapy
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Stage IIIA NSCLC
|
Resected or resectable
disease
|
Surgery
|
Neoadjuvant
therapy
|
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Adjuvant therapy
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Unresectable disease
|
Radiation therapy
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Chemoradiation
therapy
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Superior sulcus tumors
|
Radiation therapy alone
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Radiation therapy
and surgery
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Concurrent
chemotherapy with radiation therapy and surgery
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Surgery alone (for selected patients)
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Tumors that invade the chest
wall
|
Surgery
|
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Surgery and
radiation therapy
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Radiation therapy alone
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Chemotherapy
combined with radiation therapy and/or surgery
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Stage IIIB NSCLC
|
Sequential or
concurrent chemotherapy and radiation therapy
|
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Chemotherapy followed by
surgery (for selected patients)
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Radiation therapy alone
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Stage IV NSCLC
|
Cytotoxic
combination chemotherapy (first
line)
|
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Combination
chemotherapy with bevacizumab or cetuximab
|
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EGFR tyrosine
kinase inhibitors (first
line)
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EML4-ALK inhibitors in patients
with EML-ALK translocations
|
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Maintenance
therapy following first-line chemotherapy
|
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Endobronchial
laser therapy and/or brachytherapy (for obstructing lesions)
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External-beam
radiation therapy (primarily
for palliation of local symptomatic tumor growth)
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Recurrent NSCLC
|
Radiation therapy (for palliation)
|
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Chemotherapy or
kinase inhibitors alone
|
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EGFR inhibitors
in patients with/without EGFR mutations
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EML4-ALK
inhibitors in patients with EML-ALK translocations
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Surgical
resection of isolated cerebral metastasis (for highly selected patients)
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Laser therapy or
interstitial radiation therapy (for endobronchial lesions)
|
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Stereotactic
radiation surgery (for
highly selected patients)
|
In
addition to the standard treatment options presented in Table 11, treatment
options under clinical evaluation include the following:
·
Combining
local treatment (surgery).
·
Regional
treatment (radiation therapy).
·
Systemic
treatments (chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and targeted agents).
·
Developing
more effective systemic therapy.
Follow-Up
Several
small series have reported that reduction in fluorodeoxyglucose-positron
emission tomography (FDG-PET) after chemotherapy, radiation therapy, or
chemoradiation therapy correlates with pathological complete response and
favorable prognosis.[8-15] Studies have used different timing of
assessments, FDG-PET parameters, and cutpoints to define FDG-PET response.
Reduction in maximum standardized uptake value (SUV) of more than 80% predicted
for complete pathological response with a sensitivity of 90%, specificity of
100%, and accuracy of 96%.[16] Median survival after resection was
greater for patients with tumor SUV values of less than 4 (56 mo vs. 19 mo).[15] Patients with complete metabolic response
following radiation therapy were reported to have median survivals of 31 months
versus 11 months.[17]
FDG-PET may
be more sensitive and specific than computed tomography scan in assessing
response to induction therapy. Optimal timing imaging remains to be defined;
however, one study suggests that greater sensitivity and specificity of FDG-PET
is achieved if repeat imaging is delayed until 30 days after radiation
therapy.[16]
Current Clinical Trials
Check
for U.S. clinical trials from NCI's list of cancer clinical trials that are now
accepting patients withnon-small cell lung cancer. The list of
clinical trials can be further narrowed by location, drug, intervention, and
other criteria.
General
information about clinical trials is also available from the NCI
Web site.
References
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FR, Coles B: Prophylactic cranial irradiation for preventing brain
metastases in patients undergoing radical treatment for non-small-cell
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690-4, 2005. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Pöttgen C,
Eberhardt W, Grannass A, et al.: Prophylactic cranial irradiation in
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chemoradiotherapy: results from a German multicenter randomized trial. J
Clin Oncol 25 (31): 4987-92, 2007. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Chemotherapy for
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- Chemotherapy in
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Souhami RL, et al.: Chemotherapy versus supportive care in advanced
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of life. Thorax 59 (10): 828-36, 2004. [PUBMED Abstract]
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CB, Langer CJ, et al.: Long-term benefit is observed in a phase III
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G, Thomas P, et al.: Randomized phase III trial of sequential
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emission tomography/computed tomography in non-small-cell lung cancer for
prediction of pathologic response and times to relapse after neoadjuvant
chemoradiotherapy. Clin Cancer Res 12 (1): 97-106, 2006. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Eschmann SM,
Friedel G, Paulsen F, et al.: 18F-FDG PET for assessment of therapy
response and preoperative re-evaluation after neoadjuvant
radio-chemotherapy in stage III non-small cell lung cancer. Eur J Nucl Med
Mol Imaging 34 (4): 463-71, 2007. [PUBMED Abstract]
- Hellwig D, Graeter
TP, Ukena D, et al.: Value of F-18-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission
tomography after induction therapy of locally advanced bronchogenic
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- Cerfolio RJ, Bryant
AS: When is it best to repeat a 2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose positron
emission tomography/computed tomography scan on patients with non-small
cell lung cancer who have received neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy? Ann
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- Mac Manus MP, Hicks
RJ, Matthews JP, et al.: Positron emission tomography is superior to
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