Interdisciplinary multimodality management of stage III nonsmall cell lung cancer.
TL;DR: An interdisciplinary discussion amongst the tumour board is warranted and offers the best management strategy, as Stage III NSCLC is a heterogenous group and outcome depends on a good inter- and multidisciplinary strategy.
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Abstract: 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.
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Citations
Treatment Characteristics and Real-World Progression-Free Survival in Patients with Unresectable Stage III NSCLC who Received Durvalumab After Chemoradiotherapy: Findings from the PACIFIC-R Study.
Nicolas Girard,Jair Bar,Pilar Garrido,Marina Chiara Garassino,Fiona McDonald,Françoise Mornex,Andrea Riccardo Filippi,Hans J.M. Smit,Solange Peters,John K. Field,Daniel C. Christoph,A Sibille,Rainer Fietkau,Vilde D. Haakensen,Christos Chouaid,Benjamin Markman,T. Jeroen N. Hiltermann,Álvaro Taus,William T. Sawyer,A. Allen,Pratibha Chander,Muriel Licour,Benjamin Solomon +22 more
TL;DR: The PACIFIC-R study as discussed by the authors evaluated the real-world effectiveness of consolidation durvalumab in patients from an early access program and reported treatment characteristics and a preplanned analysis of realworld progression-free survival (rwPFS).
130
Real-World Treatment Patterns and Clinical Outcomes in Patients With Stage III NSCLC: Results of KINDLE, a Multicountry Observational Study.
Abdul Rahman Jazieh,Huseyın Cem Onal,Daniel Shao Weng Tan,Ross A. Soo,Kumar Prabhash,Amit Kumar,R. Huggenberger,S. Robb,Byoung Chul Cho +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a real-world, global study to characterize patients, treatment patterns, and their associated clinical outcomes for stage III NSCLC, and the overall median progression-free survival (95% confidence interval) and median overall survival (mOS) were 12.5 months and 34.9 months, respectively.
34
Management of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer: state of the art and future directions.
Da Miao,Jing Zhao,Ying Han,Jiaqi Zhou,Xiuzhen Li,Ting Zhang,Wen Li,Yang Xia +7 more
TL;DR: The landscape of relevant therapeutic modalities, including adjuvant, neoadjuvant, and perioperative targeted and immune strategies in patients with resectable LA‐NSCLC with/without oncogenic alterations; as well as novel combinations of chemoradiation and immunotherapy/targeted therapy in unresectable LA‐NSCLC are reviewed.
31
Concurrent chemoradiotherapy for stage III non-small-cell lung cancer: recent progress and future perspectives (a narrative review).
TL;DR: Recent developments in curative CHRT for inoperable stage III NSCLC are summarized, perspectives for further improvements of this strategy are presented, and 60 Gy in 2 Gy fractions or equivalent biological dose remains the standard dose for definitive CHRT in locally advancedNSCLC.
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