Clin Cancer Res
-
Over the last two decades, several approaches to multimodality therapy have been investigated in patients with advanced unresectable non-small cell lung cancer. These include induction chemotherapy and concurrent chemoradiotherapy. Both approaches have been shown to be superior to radiation therapy alone. ⋯ However, to date, no large randomized study evaluating a possible benefit from consolidation chemotherapy has been completed. In addition to evaluating optimal sequencing strategies of combined modality therapy, current investigations are also focusing on the integration of novel agents, including chemotherapeutic and targeted therapies. Currently ongoing trials involving novel approaches are reviewed here.
-
Past lung cancer screening trials in the United States with chest X-ray and sputum cytology were not able to show any decrease in lung cancer mortality; however, these trials are over 20 years old. Recent follow-up of the Mayo Lung Project showed a better survival from lung cancer in the screened arm, but no difference in overall mortality, suggesting an overdiagnosis of nonfatal cancers. ⋯ All data available thus far on CT screening are from phase II proof-of-principle trials. The major limitations of CT screening, discussed here, include (a) a high rate of nodule detection: over 50% of participants will have at least one noncalcified nodule; (b) resulting follow-up CT scans, associated with increased costs; (c) cost and morbidity of biopsy or resection of benign noncalcified nodule (20-25% of such procedures in several trials); and (d) a small, but difficult to quantify, risk of cancer associated with multiple follow-up CT scans.
-
Adjuvant chemotherapy is the standard of therapy for some patients with stages I, II, and III breast and colon cancer. The therapeutic efficacy of adjuvant chemotherapy following surgical resection of early stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has been less clear. A meta-analysis was reported in 1995 of patients who underwent surgical resection for early stage NSCLC and were then randomized to either observation or chemotherapy. ⋯ The hazard ratio of death for the patients treated with chemotherapy ranged from 0.61 to 0.86 compared with patients on observation. Thus, the information available at the current time supports the administration of chemotherapy for patients with stages IB and II NSCLC. Further research will be needed to define the role of adjuvant chemotherapy and its use in conjunction with chest radiotherapy for the treatment of patients with resected stages IA and IIIA NSCLC.