Role of surgery in a novel multimodal therapeutic approach to complete cure of advanced lung cancer: current and future perspectives.
Masaomi YamaneShinichi ToyookaPublished in: Surgery today (2021)
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is considered potentially curable by multimodal therapy in a subset of patients, including those with locally advanced (LA) disease or nodal spread, who would otherwise have a poor prognosis. Guidelines recommend perioperative chemotherapy with platinum-based regimens, with or without radiotherapy, as the standard treatment modality for high-risk resectable LA-NSCLC. Although the classical regimens of adjuvant chemotherapy have been platinum-based doublet or oral agents such as tegafur/uracil, some molecular targeted therapeutic agents and immune checkpoint inhibitors have been developed recently with an expected favorable effect. Recent trials of perioperative therapy using these agents have demonstrated favourable anticancer efficacy for LA-NSCLC with an acceptable adverse events profile. The ideal timing of perioperative therapy administration, before or after surgery, is still controversial. Because some speculation and concepts have arisen from basic research, several trials are ongoing to clarify the efficacy of newly developed agents in the adjuvant or neoadjuvant setting. This review discusses the role of surgery in the new era and analyzes when and which optimal perioperative multimodal therapy, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy, molecular-targeted therapy, and immunotherapy, should be administered for resectable or potentially resectable NSCLC to provide possible complete cure.
Keyphrases
- locally advanced
- rectal cancer
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small cell lung cancer
- poor prognosis
- radiation therapy
- phase ii study
- patients undergoing
- cardiac surgery
- early stage
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- minimally invasive
- long non coding rna
- end stage renal disease
- pain management
- chronic kidney disease
- lymph node
- stem cells
- acute coronary syndrome
- mesenchymal stem cells
- clinical practice
- open label
- brain metastases
- combination therapy
- surgical site infection