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NSCLC
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NSCLC 85% of lung cancers Non-squamous Adenocarcinoma (subtypes based on gene expression) 1.Broncioid (associated with increased survival in early stage) 2.Squamoid (associated with increased survival in advanced disease) Bronchioloalveolar is subtype of adenocarcinoma Large-cell Squamous
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Mediastinal L.N. CT scan: Negative LN by CT 3% +ve by biopsy May proceed with surgery 1-2cm LN by CT 10-20% +ve by biopsy >2cm LN by CT 60% +ve by biopsy >4cm LN 90% +ve by biopsy PET scan: 94% sensit, 86% specif, 88% accuracy Does not replace Mediastinoscopy Mediastinoscopy + Biopsy
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New TNM Staging International Association of the Study of lung Cancer (IASLC) staging is adopted by AJCC (7 th edition)
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Changes To TNM staging T4 pleural and/or pericardial effusion and/or pleural nodules becomes M1a Additional nodules in the contralateral lung are subclassified as M1a Distant metastases are subclassified as M1b
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Sub-classify T1 into T1a and T1b a. T1a 2 cm and < 3 cm T2 into T2a and T2b a. T2a > 3 cm and 5 cm and < 7 cm
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Reclassify T2 lesions larger than 7 cm as T3 T4 tumors with additional nodules in the primary lobe as T3 M1 by additional nodules in the ipsilateral lung (different lobe) as T4
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*Red color indicates the changes AJCC 6 th editionAJCC 7 th editionNoN1N2N3 T1 (< 2 cm)T1aIAIIAIIIAIIIB T1 (>2-3cm)T1bIAIIAIIIAIIIB T2 (<5cm)T2aIBIIAIIIAIIIB T2 (>5-7cm)T2bIIAIIBIIIAIIIB T2 (>7cm)T3IIBIIIA IIIB T3 invasionT3IIBIIIA IIIB T4 same lobe noduleT3IIBIIIA IIIB T4 extensionT4IIIA IIIB M1 ipsil lungT4IIIA IIIB T4 p effusionM1aIV M1 cont lungM1aIV M1 distantM1bIV
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Stages at diagnosis 16% = localized 5YS = 49.5% 25% = regional LN and locally advanced 5YS = 20.6% 51% = metastatic 5YS = 2.8% 8% = unkown 5YS = 8.3%
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Prognostic and Predictive Biomarkers Prognostic: Indicative of survival independent of therapy Indicates innate tumor aggressiveness ERCC1 (high expression = better prognosis) K-ras mutation = poor prognosis RRM1 (high expression = better prognosis) Predictive: Indicative of therapeutic efficaciy EGFR mutation (E19del, L858R) = response to EGFR TKI ERCC1 (high expression = poor response to platinum) K-ras mutation = lack of benefit from EGFR TKI and platinum/vinorelbine RRM1 (high expression = poor eresponse to Gemzar)
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TREATMENT 1. Surgery Lobectomy is preferred over pneumonectomy Any surgical resection is preferred over ablation 2. Radiation Therapy 3. Chemotherapy
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SURGERY
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Surgery Lobectomy is preferred over pneumonectomy Any surgical resection is preferred over ablation
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Segmentectomy (preferred) or Wedge Resection 1. Not good surgical candidates 2. Peripheral nodule < 2cm with at least one of the following 1.Pure BAC histology 2.> 50% ground glass appearance on CT 3.Doubling time > 400 days
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Video-Assisted Thoracotomy (VAT) Advantages: 1. Minimal acute/chronic pain 2. Shorter hospitalization 3. Low postop morbidity, mortality 4. Minimal risk of intraop bleeding 5. Minimal locoregional recurrence
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Mediastinal LND ACOSOG Z0030 (ongoing) N0 – N1 disease: Med LN sampling vs complete Lymphadenctomy Minimum of three N2 stations sampled
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Radiation Therapy
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1. Adjuvant 2. Primary local treatment 1.Medically inoperable 2.Unresectable 3. Palliative
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Stereotactic Body RT Inoperable stage I, N-ve, peripheral lesions <5cm Provides statistically sig higher 5YS than 3-D RT in stage I Limited lung mets Brain mets
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Radiofrequency Ablation (RFA) N-ve, isolated peripheral lesion <3cm: Pt refuse surgery Medically not fit for surgery Previously irradiated tissue palliation
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PCI (25 Gy in 10 factions) Controversial RTOG 0214 (PCI in stage III): Brain mets 18% vs 7.7% No survival benefits
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ADJUVANT CHEMOTHERAPY
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Surgery Chemotherapy 1. International Adj Lung Cancer Trial (IALT): Resected I, II, III (1867 pts) Adj Cisplatin-based chemo vs observation 5Y f/u: 44.5 vs 40.4% (p<0.03) DFS 39.4 vs 34.3% (P<0.003) 7.5Y f/u: More death in the chemo arm Chemo benefit is decreasing over time
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Surgery Chemotherapy 2. NCIC CTG JBR 10 trail: Stage IB-II (482 pts) Vinorelbine/Cis vs Observation OS: 94 m vs 73 m RFS: not reached vs 46.7m 5YS: 69 vs 54% (p=0.03) 9Y f/u: Chemo benefits stage II but not IB Stage II: MS 6.8 vs 3.6 yrs No increase in death rate
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Surgery Chemotherapy 3. ANITA (Adj Navelbine International Trialist Association) trial: Stage IB, II, IIIA (840 pts) Vinorelbine/Cis vs Observation 76m f/u: MS 65.7 vs 43.7m Adj chemo improved 5YS in stage II-IIIA No benefit in stage I
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Surgery Chemotherapy 4. CALGB 9633 Stage IB (344 pts) Paclitaxel/Carbo vs Observation 3Y OS: 79 vs 70 (P=0.45) 4Y OS: No diff Subset analysis: Benefit tumor >4cm
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Surgery Chemotherapy Summary Meta-analysis in 4,584 pts (the Lung Adj Cisplatin Evaluation) Postop Cis-based adj increased survival over 5Y Absolute benefit 5.4% No diff among regimens (Vinorelbine, VP, others) Benefit greater in stage II-III and good PS Paclitaxel/Carbo if pt cannot tolerates Cisplatin
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ChemoRadiation
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Stage IIIA What is the best?!?!?!? SurgeryRT+/-ChemoChemo+/-RT
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Unresectable IIIA/IIIB ChemoRT is superior to RT alone Concurrent chemoRT Superior to Sequential Higher rate of G3-4 esophagitis Initial concurrent chemoRT: Cis/VP (preferred) Cis/Vinorelbine (preferred) Taxol/Carbo (category 2B)
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Unresectable IIIA/IIIB Phase II SWOG 9504 (83 pts stage IIIB): Concurrent Cis/VP+RT Doce MS: 26m 5YS: 29% Phase III, stage III: Concurrent Cis/VP+RT Doce No survival benefit Increased toxicity Randomized trial, IIIA/IIIB (203pts): Induction chemo RT+/-taxol MS: 18.7 vs 14.1m (P=0.091)
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Resected tumor, pN2 NCCN: Negative margins: Sequential Chemo RT Positive margins: Postop concurrent ChemoRT +/- chemo
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Chemotherapy Stage IV Good PS Platinum-based 30-40% 1 Yr survival rates Doublets superior to single agents
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ROLE of chemotherapy No chemotherapy: 10% 1YS, 0% 2YS Active single agent: 15%RR, 20%1YS, 10%2YS Active 2 drugs: 25%RR, 35%1YS, 20%2YS
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Doublets chemo regimens Cisplatin or Carbo + Taxol Cisplatin + Vinorelbine Cisplatin + Gemzar Cisplatin + Pemetrexed Cisplatin + docetaxel Phase III studies: Similar objective responses and Survival They differ in Toxicities, Convenience, and Cost Other options: Docetaxel + Gemzar Gemzar + Vinorelbine Cisplatin + Gemzar Carboplatin + Pemetrexed Carboplatin + docetaxel
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Abraxane (Albumin-bound Taxol) For patients with hypersensitivity reaction to: Taxol Docetaxel Or if premedications are contraindicated
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Targeted Therapies Anti-VEGF Monoclonal antibody: Bevacizumab (Avastin) Anti-EGFR Small molecule: Erltinib (Tarceva) Monoclonal antibody: Cetuximab (Erbitux) Anti-Alk Small molecule: Crizotinib (Xalkori)
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Anti-VEGF Monoclonal antibody: Bevacizumab (Avastin Unresectable, recurrent, met NON-SQUAMOUS ECOG 4599: Avastin + Taxol + Carboplatin
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Anti-EGFR (TKIs) Small molecule: Erltinib (Tarceva) or Gefitinib Locally advanced, met NSCLC After failure of at least one regimen First-line if EGFR mutation present Based on Iressa Pan Asia Study (IPASS)
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Iressa Pan-Asia Study (IPASS) First-line gefitinib vs chemotherapy in clinically selected patients with EGFR mutation Sig clinical PFS benefit No sig OS benefit Because there was a high rate of cross-over
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Anti-EGFR Monoclonal antibody: Cetuximab (Erbitux) Phase III FELX (Cis/Vin +/- Erbitux) Slight OS benefit (11.3 vs 10.1m) Toxic regimen
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Anti-Alk (Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase) Small molecule: Crizotinib (Xalkori) Phase II: Advanced progressive NSCLC >80% RR Improved pain, dyspnea, cough
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Definition Treatment beyond 4-6 cycles of 1 st line chemotherapy in the absence of disease progression. Selection of drug depends on histology and pt P.S.
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CONCEPT OF MAINTENANCE 1 st Line doublet: Platinum- based Diagnosis Maintenance Response or Stable 2 nd Line therapy Progression
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TYPES OF MAINTENANCE THERAPY Continuation Maintenance: Continuing 1 st line cheotherapy For a limited number of cycles Until progression or toxicity No randomized trial supporting continuation of cytotoxic drugs Continuing the non-platinum drug Gemzar Pemetrexed Non-squamous, EGFR mutation negative or unknown Continuing the same targeted therapy Bevacizumab (FDA appoved) Cetuximab Non-squamous, EGFR mutation negative or unknown
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TYPES OF MAINTENANCE THERAPY Switch Maintenance: Switching to a different drug Pemetrexed (FDA approved) Targeted: Erlotinib (FDA approved), Gefitinib Cytotoxic: Vinorelbine, Adding a second targeted agent after chemo Erlotinib to Bevacizumab
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TARCEVA: maintenance SATURN ( Sequential Tarceva in Unresectable NSCLC) Have two co primary end points: PFS in the entire intent-to-treat population PFS in pts with EGFR-positive tumors on the basis of IHC It was large and well powered, It was placebo controlled, following 1 st line platinum-based It met both of its primary end points with: Significant prolongation of PFS in the intent-to-treat and the EGFR IHC-positive populations. However, the median PFS prolongation for both populations was of only questionable clinical relevance (despite strong statistical significance) with only 1 month median benefit. OS also was significantly prolonged in both populations, but once again with only modest absolute improvements.
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EGFR mutation status was the most clinically and statistically important marker for PFS benefit in SATURN
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SATURN CONCLUSION First-line maintenance with erlotinib could be considered in patients who do not progress after four cycles of chemotherapy
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Prospective Molecular Marker Analyses of EGFR and KRAS From a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Study of Erlotinib Maintenace Therapy in Advanced NSCLC patients with activating EGFR mutations derive the greatest PFS benefit from erlotinib maintenance therapy. Significant PFS benefits were also observed with erlotinib in the wild-type EGFR subgroup KRAS mutation status was a significant negative prognostic factor for PFS EGFR IHC–positive KRAS mutations were prognostic for reduced PFS
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MAINTENANCE THERAPY Although maintenance therapy may lead to PFS benefit without meaningful survival benefit: The idea of maintenance therapy is rapidly gaining acceptance in the cancer community It is difficult to argue against prolongation of time without cancer progression or time without worsening of symptoms, particularly if this can be achieved without significant toxicity, as is the case with EGFR TKIs
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WHO BENEFIT FROM MAINTENANCE THERAPY? May use the following to identify the patients who are most likely to benefit: Clinical characteristics molecular markers.
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