Interdisciplinary multimodality management of stage III nonsmall cell lung cancer.
Rudolf Maria HuberDirk De RuysscherHans HoffmannSimone ReuAmanda TufmanPublished in: European respiratory review : an official journal of the European Respiratory Society (2019)
Stage III nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) comprises about one-third of NSCLC patients and is very heterogeneous with varying and mostly poor prognosis. It is also called "locoregionally or locally advanced disease". Due to its heterogeneity a general schematic management approach is not appropriate. Usually a combination of local therapy (surgery or radiotherapy, depending on functional, technical and oncological operability) with systemic platinum-based doublet chemotherapy and, recently, followed by immune therapy is used. A more aggressive approach of triple agent chemotherapy or two local therapies (surgery and radiotherapy, except for specific indications) has no benefit for overall survival. Until now tumour stage and the general condition of the patient are the most relevant prognostic factors. Characterising the tumour molecularly and immunologically may lead to a more personalised and effective approach. At the moment, after an exact staging and functional evaluation, an interdisciplinary discussion amongst the tumour board is warranted and offers the best management strategy.
Keyphrases
- locally advanced
- prognostic factors
- rectal cancer
- poor prognosis
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- single cell
- radiation therapy
- minimally invasive
- small cell lung cancer
- phase ii study
- early stage
- coronary artery bypass
- end stage renal disease
- long non coding rna
- cell therapy
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- clinical trial
- case report
- coronary artery disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- robot assisted
- brain metastases
- density functional theory
- chemotherapy induced