Literature DB >> 11040328

Postoperative irradiation in non-small cell lung cancer.

T E Sawyer1, J A Bonner.   

Abstract

A growing body of evidence suggests that postoperative irradiation for non-small cell lung cancer may cause life-threatening toxicity and, when the risk of local-regional recurrence is low, the toxicity of irradiation may outweight the benefit. However, many of these studies used outdated, even crude techniques. Although these techniques may be responsible for a significant amount of the toxicity reported in these studies, essentially no randomized or high-quality retrospective study has shown a survival benefit for postoperative irradiation for patients with N0 or N1 disease. The situation for N2 tumors is more positive. Taken as a whole, the available data suggest that, as a worst-case scenario, the net effect of adjuvant irradiation is neutral (with neither a net survival decrement nor a net advantage). As a best-case scenario, postoperative irradiation may improve the chance for long-term survival in patients with N2 tumors. Copyright 2000 by W.B. Saunders Company.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11040328     DOI: 10.1053/srao.2000.9131

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Semin Radiat Oncol        ISSN: 1053-4296            Impact factor:   5.934


  1 in total

1.  Surgical therapeutic strategy for non-small cell lung cancer with mediastinal lymph node metastasis (N2).

Authors:  Qianli Ma; Deruo Liu; Yongqing Guo; Bin Shi; Zhiyi Song; Yanchu Tian
Journal:  Zhongguo Fei Ai Za Zhi       Date:  2010-04
  1 in total

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