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Lung Cancer R. Zenhäusern Lung cancer: Epidemiology Most common cancer in the world – 2./ 3. most cancer in men / women 1.2 million new cases / year 1.1 million deaths / year Incidence – Men 1940-80: 10 70/100000/J – Women 1965-: 5 30/100000/J Lung cancer: Epidemiology 13% of cancers, 18% of cancer deaths Switzerland 3500 new cases / year 80% die during the first year Prognosis remains dismal: – five-year survival 10-14% EVOLUTION OF CANCER DEATH RATES 80 Lung Males Rate per 100,000 Male Population 70 60 50 40 30 Prostate Colon and rectum 20 Pancreas Stomach Esophagus Bladder 10 0 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 Year US data/Adapted from Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 1994. EVOLUTION OF CANCER DEATH RATES Rate pe r 10 0,0 00 Female Pop ulation 80 Females 70 60 50 40 30 Lung Bre ast 20 Colon and rectum Ova ry Pancreas Uterus Stoma ch 10 0 193 0 194 0 195 0 196 0 197 0 198 0 199 0 Yea r US data/Adapted from Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 1994. Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer 75 % of all lung cancers Majority of patients present with stage III and IV NSCLC: Histology Squamos-cell carcinoma 20-25% Adenocarcinoma 40% Large cell carcinoma 10% LUNG CANCER: 2-YEAR SURVIVAL By stage and histologic type 47% 46% 43% 40% Stage I Stage II Stage III 14% 12% 13% 13% 8% 6% 5% Squamous cell Adenocarcinoma Large cell 4% Small cell Adapted from Rosenow and C arr NSCLC: Staging Staging Locoregional Disease: – Chest x-ray and chest CT scan (including liver and adrenal glands) – No evidence of distant metastatic disease: FDG-PET ist recommended – Biopsy of mediastinal LN ist recommended: CT-scan > 1.0 cm or positive on PET neg. PET scanning does not preclude biopsy ASCO Guideline 2004;22:330 NSCLC: Staging Staging Distant Metastatic Disease: – No evidence of distant metastatic disease on CT scan of the chest: PET ist recommended – A bone scan is optional – Resectable primary lung lesion and bone lesion on PET/bone scan: MRI/CT and biopsy – Brain: CT or MRI if symptoms, patients with stage III considered for aggressive local Th. – Isolated adrenal mass: biopsy – Isolated liver mass: biopsy ASCO Guideline 2004;22:330 Staging of Lung Cancer Stage Local TNM IA T1 No Mo IB T2 No Mo IIA T1 N1 Mo Locally advanced IIB T2-3 No-1 Mo IIIA T1-2 N2 Mo T3 N1-2 Mo IIIB AnyT N3 Mo Advanced IIIB T4 any N Mo IV M1 1y OS 5y OS 94% 87% 89% 67% 57% 55% 73% 64% 39% 23% 32% 3% 37% 20% 7% 1% Local NSCLC: Stage I, II Standard of care = Surgery Relapse rate 35%-50% in St. I Relapse rate 40%-60% in St. II Adjuvant radiotherapy ? Adjuvant chemotherapy ? Adjuvant Radiotherapy Port meta-analysis Trialist Group. Lancet 1998;352:257 – 9 randomised trials of postoperative RT versus surgery (2128 patients) – – – – 21% relative increase in the risk of death with RT Reduction of OS from 55% to 48% (at 2 years) Adverse effect was greatest for Stage I,II St.III (N2): no clear evidence of an adverse effect Adjuvant Radiotherapy Conclusion – Postoperative RT should not be used outside of a clinical trial in Stage I, II lung cancer, unless surgical margins are positive and repeated resection is not feasible. Adjuvant Chemotherapy Undetectable microscopic metastasis at diagnosis Individual trials have not shown a significant benefit Meta-analysis BMJ 1995;311:899: – Alkylating agents had an adverse effect – Cisplatin-based therapy: 13% reduction in risk of death (not significant) Postoperative Chemo- and Radiotherapy ECOG-Trial: 488 patients with stage II, IIIA RT alone (50.4 Gy) versus RT + 4x Cisplatin/Etoposid Median survival TRM Local recurrence 39 vs 38 months (ns) 1.2 vs 1.6% 13 vs 12% Keller et al. NEJM 2000;343:1217 Cisplatin-based Adjuvant Chemotherapy (International Adjuvant Lung Cancer Trial Collaboratvie Group) Randomised trial of 3-4 cycles of cisplatin-based CT vs observation in patients with St. II, III LC CT no CT 5-Y. DFS 39.4% 34.3% p <0.03 5-y. OS 44.5% 40.4% p <0.03 IALT. NEJM 2004;350:351 Overall Survival (Panel A) and Disease-free Survival (Panel B) The International Adjuvant Lung Cancer Trial Collaborative Group, N Engl J Med 2004;350:351360 Adjuvant Chemotherapy Conclusion: – One should consider the use of adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy in patients with stage I,II or IIA NSCLC Locally advanced NSCLC Thoracic irradiation is the mainstay of treatment for inoperable stage III disease Its curative potential is extremely poor 5-year survival rates 3-5% Locally advanced NSCLC A meta-analysis of 22 randomised studies showed a beneficial effect of CT added to RT – 10% reduction in risk of death per year – Small absolute survival benefit: 4% after 2 years 2% after 5 years NSCLC Collaborative Group. BMJ 1995;311:899 Combined chemotherapy and radiation Sequential strategies – Primary CT – Primary and adjuvant CT C C.. R R R R R C C.. R R R R R C C – Daily CT C C C C C R R R R R C.. R R R R R Concomitant Strategies – Intermittent CT Combined Strategies – Primary and concomitant CT C C C C C R R R R R C.. R R R R R C... C C.. R R R R R Therapeutic Strategies Sequential CT–RT + CT in standard dose of micrometastasis volume of primary tumor - longer treatment time delay of RT Concomittant C-RT + Improvement of local control (radiosensitisation) - greater toxic effects Reduced dose of CT Sequential chemo- and radiotherapy Studies performed in the 1980s did not show an advantage Three large phase III trials gave pos. Results – Dillman etal. NEJM 1990;329:940 – Sause et al. JNCI 1995;87:198 – Le Chevalier et al. JNCI 1992;8:58 Sequential chemo- and radiotherapy Dillman etal. NEJM 1990;329:940 (CALGB 8433) 2 cycles of Cis / Vbl RT (60 Gy/6 w) R RT (60 Gy/6 w) Results: Sequential CT and RT Med. S 2y-S 3y-S 7y-S (%) CT-RT 14 mo 26 23 17 RT 10 mo 13 11 6 Dillman etal. NEJM 1990;329:940 Dillman et al. JNCI 1996;88:1210 Results: Sequential CT and RT US intergroup trial Sause W. JNCI 1995;87:198 n=458 Sause W. Chest 2000;117:351 RT 2x Cis/Vbl hyper RT MS (mo) 11.4 13.2 12 5y-S (%) 5 8 6 French trial Le Chevalier JNCI 1992;8:58 N=353 3x CT RT vs RT 3y-S 12% vs 4% Concomitant Chemo- and Radiotherapy Simultaneous CT / RT is beneficial in: – Head and neck cancer – Anal cancer – Cervical cancer Cisplatin is effective as a radiosensitiser – 6-8 mg/m2 daily – 30 mg/m2 weekly – 70 mg/m2 3-weekly Concomitant CT-RT: EORTC Trial Schaake-Koning C. NEJM 1992;326:524 331 patients randomised to one of three regimens: – RT alone: 30 Gy in 10 fractions, 3-week rest period, 25 Gy in 10 fractions – RT + daily cisplatin (6-8 mg/m2) – RT + weekly cisplatin (30 mg/m2) EORTC Trial: Results 2-year Survival RT alone: RT + daily cisplatin: RT + weekly cisplatin: 13% 26% 18% Schaake-Koning C. NEJM 1992;326:524 INOPERABLE NSCLC Survival after radiotherapy and cisplatin 100 Radiotherapy 90 Radiotherapy + cisplatin weekly 80 Radiotherapy + cisplatin daily Survival (%) 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 1 2 Year of Study 3 4 Adapted from NEJM.1992;326:524-530. Sequential versus concomitant CT-RT Japanese study: Furuse K et al. JCO 1999;17:2692 n= 320 MS (mo) 5y-DFS -2 cycles MVC RT 56 Gy 13.3 19% -MCV/RT-10 days rest-MVC/RT 16.5 27% RTOG 9410: n=611 2xCVRT(60Gy) vs CV/RT Curran WJ. ASCO 2003;22:a621 OS: 4 vs 25% p= 0.046 Neoadjuvant Therapy Pancoast`s tumor, vertebral invasion – Combined neoadjuvant CT-RT should be considered Tumors with ipsilateral mediastinal spread (N2) – Poor survival with surgery alone – 2 small randomised trials showed a benefit of neoadjuvant combined CT-RT – Roth et al. JNCI 1994;86:673 – Phase II trials report good results of neoadjuvant CT§ SAKK Studies SAKK 16/00 – Preoperative CRT vs CT in NSCLC stage IIIA – CT: 3 cycles docetaxel and cisplatin (D1,22,43) – RT: 3 weeks of RT (44 Gy in 22 fractions) SAKK 16/01 – Preoperative CRT in NSCLC pts with operable stage IIIB disease – The same regimen as 16/00 Metastasis 40-50% at diagnosis 70% during follow-up Chremotherapy for NSCLC Old agents New agents – Cisplatin – Docetaxel – Carboplatin – Paclitaxel – Etoposid – Vinorelbine – Vinblastin – Gemcitabine – Irinotecan NSCLC: chemotherapy combinations Regimes Results Response rate 19% – Cisplatin+Gemcitabine Median survival 8 months – Cisplatin+Docetaxel – Cisplatin+Paclitaxel – Carboplatin+paclitaxel (n=1155 pts.) 1-year survival 2-year survival 33% 11% Schiller et al. NEJM 2002;346:92 New agents: Induction CT followed by concomitant CT-RT Induction (2 cycles) Concomitant Vinorelbine Cisplatin 25 mg/m2 D1,8,(15) 80 mg/m2 D1 Paclitaxel Cisplatin 225 mg/m2 D1 80 mg/m2 D1 135 mg/m2 D1 80 mg/m2 D1 Gemcitabine Cisplatin 1250 mg/m2 D1,8 80 mg/m2 D1 600 mg/m2 D1,8 80 mg/m2 D1 (2 cycles) 15 mg/m2 D1,8 80 mg/m2 D1 CALGB study 9431: Vokes et al. JCO 2002;20:4191 New agents: Induction CT followed by concomitant CT-RT RR(CT) RR(CT-RT) 1yS 2yS 3yS (%) V+C 44% 73% 65 40 23 P+C 33% 67% 62 29 19 G+C 40% 74% 68 37 28 CALGB study 9431: Vokes et al. JCO 2002;20:4191 Conclusion: Combined-Modality Therapy for Stage III Disease Adding CT to radiation therapy improves survival and alters the course of this disease Phase III studies suggest improvement in both local control and survival with concomitant CT-RT Combined CT-RT should be the standard of care of patients with good PS and minimal weight loss The absolute gain from combined CT-RT is still modest The role of surgery following induction CT-RT is for patients with unresectable Cancer is being explored Small-cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) 15-20% of all lung cancer Incidence: 15/100000/year Men : women = 5 : 1 SCLC Rapid local and metastatic spread Mediastinal lymph node metastasis in most cases Median Survival in untreated patients 2-3 months Superior vena caval obstruction and paraneoplastic syndromes (SIADH, Cushing) Association with smoking SCLC Staging Limited Disease Extensive Disease Confined to: – One hemithorax – Mediastinum – Ipislateral hilar and supraclavicular nodes – Malignant pleura and pericard effusion – Contralateral hilar and supraclavicular nodes SCLC Therapy No surgery; SCLC is a systemic disease Chemotherapy is the standard of care – Cisplatin+Etoposid Limited stage SCLC: Bimodality therapy with chemotherapy and radiotherapy SCLC Therapy The addition of thoracic RT significantly improves survival in patients with LS-SCLC – Meta-analysis. Pignon et al. NEJM 1992;327:1618 – 14% reduction in the mortality rate – 5.4% benefit in terms of OS at 3 years Early use of RT with CT improves cure rates SCLC Therapy The actuarial risk of CNS metastasis developing 2 years after CR of SCLC is 35%-60% Prophylactic cranial Irradiation is recommended for pts. With LS-SCLC in CR – Meta-analysis: Auperin et al. NEJM;1999:341:475 – PCI: 5.4% greater absolute survival at 3 years SCLC Results Limited Disease: – – – – – Remission rate CR Median Survival 2-year Survival 5-year Survival 80-90% 50-60% 18-20 months 40% 15-25% SCLC Results Extensive Disease: – – – – Remission rate CR Median Survival 2-year Survival 70-80% 20-30% 8-10 months < 10%