| Literature DB >> 32422364 |
Anne-Marie C Dingemans1, Ross A Soo2, Abdul Rahman Jazieh3, Shawn J Rice4, Young Tae Kim5, Lynette L S Teo6, Graham W Warren7, Shu-Yuan Xiao8, Egbert F Smit9, Joachim G Aerts10, Soon Ho Yoon11, Giulia Veronesi12, Francesco De Cobelli13, Suresh S Ramalingam14, Marina C Garassino15, Murry W Wynes16, Madhusmita Behera14, John Haanen17, Shun Lu18, Solange Peters19, Myung-Ju Ahn20, Giorgio V Scagliotti21, Alex A Adjei22, Chandra P Belani23.
Abstract
The global coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic continues to escalate at a rapid pace inundating medical facilities and creating substantial challenges globally. The risk of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection in patients with cancer seems to be higher, especially as they are more likely to present with an immunocompromised condition, either from cancer itself or from the treatments they receive. A major consideration in the delivery of cancer care during the pandemic is to balance the risk of patient exposure and infection with the need to provide effective cancer treatment. Many aspects of the SARS-CoV-2 infection currently remain poorly characterized and even less is known about the course of infection in the context of a patient with cancer. As SARS-CoV-2 is highly contagious, the risk of infection directly affects the cancer patient being treated, other cancer patients in close proximity, and health care providers. Infection at any level for patients or providers can cause considerable disruption to even the most effective treatment plans. Lung cancer patients, especially those with reduced lung function and cardiopulmonary comorbidities are more likely to have increased risk and mortality from coronavirus disease 2019 as one of its common manifestations is as an acute respiratory illness. The purpose of this manuscript is to present a practical multidisciplinary and international overview to assist in treatment for lung cancer patients during this pandemic, with the caveat that evidence is lacking in many areas. It is expected that firmer recommendations can be developed as more evidence becomes available.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Lung cancer; Patient care; SARS-CoV-2
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32422364 PMCID: PMC7227539 DOI: 10.1016/j.jtho.2020.05.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Thorac Oncol ISSN: 1556-0864 Impact factor: 15.609
Figure 1This is a scanning electron microscope image, which shows severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (round blue objects) emerging from the surface of cells cultured in the laboratory. Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, also known as 2019 novel coronavirus, is the virus that causes coronavirus disease 2019. The virus exhibited here was isolated from a patient in the United States. Adapted from National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases - Rocky Mountain Laboratories (NIAID-RML).
Symptoms, Signs, and Complications of Coronavirus Disease 2019
| Type | Symptom or Sign |
|---|---|
| Common symptoms or signs (2–14 d after exposure): >30% | Fever Cough with or without expectoration Shortness of breath or difficulty catching a breath |
| Other symptoms: 5%–15% | Headache Body aches Diarrhea Vomiting Tiredness Aches Runny nose Sore throat |
| Rare symptoms or signs <5% | Loss of smell Loss of taste Sudden confusion Disorientation Seizures Bluish lips, face, or toes Gangrenous distal digits |
| Complications | Pneumonia in both lungs/ARDS 17% Organ failure in several organs 11% Microangiopathy with thrombosis 31% |
ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome
Figure 2(A) Early stage COVID-19 CT findings: axial CT image of the lungs of a 67-year-old Italian man presenting with hemoptysis. This CT image exhibits a left upper lobe mass (arrowhead) histologically proven to be adenocarcinoma. There are also peripheral, subpleural GGOs (arrowed) and the patient was confirmed on second throat RT-PCR swab test to also have COVID-19. (B) Progressive stage COVID-19 CT findings: reconstructed axial lung image from a CT-PET scan done for the same patient 2 days later, which exhibited progression of the GGOs into areas of crazy paving (arrows) and consolidation (arrowheads). COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; CT, computed tomography; GGOs, ground-glass opacities; PET, positron emission tomography; RT-PCR, reverse transcription–polymerase chain reaction.
Figure 3Peak stage COVID-19 CT findings: axial CT images of the mediastinum (A) and lungs (B) of a 54-year-old Chinese man on day 13 of onset of symptoms exhibiting large bilateral pleural effusions with dense dependent consolidation at the lower lobes (arrows). Trivial pericardial effusion is also seen (arrowhead). Partially imaged ECMO catheter overlying the right anterior chest wall. COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019; CT, computed tomography; ECMO, extracorporal membrane oxygenation.
Figure 4(A) Axial CT lung image of a 73-year-old Chinese woman with EGFR-positive NSCLC 2 months after starting a third-generation EGFR-TKI. The upper lobes do not reveal any abnormality. (B) Axial CT lung image of the same patient 4 months after starting a third-generation EGFR-TKI. The upper lobes now reveal patchy ground-glass changes (arrows) with interstitial thickening (arrowheads) in a perihilar distribution consistent with EGFR-TKI–induced pneumonitis. CT, computed tomography; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
Salient Select Therapeutic Clinical Trials in the Treatment of Patients With Coronavirus Disease 2019
| Class | Agent | Mechanism of Actions | Developer | Original Use | Ongoing Trials |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment Of COVID-19 | |||||
| Antiviral | Remdesivir | inhibit RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | Gilead sciences | Ebola and Marburg virus infections | |
| Lopinavir-ritonavir | HIV reverse transcriptase inhibitors | AbbVie | HIV-1 infection | ||
| Favipiravir (fapilavir) | inhibit RNA-dependent RNA polymerase | Avigan | influenza | ||
| Others | Hydroxychloroquine | DMARD | Multiple | Malaria, RA, SLE, Q fever, | |
| ACE inhibitors | ACE-2 inhibitor | Multiple | Hypertension, cardiac failure | ||
| Chloroquine sulfate | glycosylation of viral ACE-2/inhibition of quinone reductase 2 | Multiple | Malaria | ||
| Azithromycin | inhibit mRNA translation | Pfizer | Respiratory tract infections | ||
| Convalescent plasma | passive immunotherapy | Multiple | NA | ||
| Treatment of COVID-19–induced Cytokine Storm | |||||
| Monoclonal Ab | Tocilizumab | IL-6 receptor antagonist | Roche | RA, GCA, CRS, JIA | |
| Sarilumab | IL-6 receptor antagonist | Regeneron, Sanofi | RA | ||
| Lenzilumab | Antihuman GM-CSF monoclonal Ab | Humanigen | CRS | ||
| Leronlimab | Anti-CCR5 receptor Ab | CytoDyn | HIV-1 infection | ||
| Eculizumab | anti-C5 antibody | Alexion | PNH, atypical HUS | ||
ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; Ab, antibody; C5, complement C5; CCR5, chemokine receptor 5; COVID 19, coronavirus disease 2019; CRS, cytokine release syndrome; DMARD, disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs; GCA, giant cell arteritis; HUS, hemolytic uremic syndrome; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IL-6, interleukin-6; JIA, juvenile idiopathic arthritis; NA, not applicable; PNH, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; SLE, systemic lupus erythematosus.
Prioritizing Treatment Options for NSCLC
| Clinical Scenario | Treatment Recommendation | Initial Delay, wk | Workup | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage I, II, and resectable IIIA | ||||
| Stage I and II, untreated | Surgery SBRT for selected stage I | 2–8 | Repeat CT scan if baseline CT >8 wk | |
| Stage I and II, resected | Observation (adjuvant therapy for a subset of stage II disease) | >8 | Expand interval for CT scans up to 4– 6 mo if asymptomatic with 4 y, then annually after y 5 | Consider CT scan but perform remote follow-up |
| Stage IIIa resectable single station | Surgery followed by chemo +/- radiation | <2 | CT scan every 4 mo | |
| Stage III untreated | Concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy but may start with chemotherapy for two cycles | <2 | Same | Consider cisplatin/ pemetrexed |
| Stage III completed chemoradiotherapy Immune therapy | <2 | Usual workup for immune checkpoint therapy | May delay up to 7 wk per the study, but the sooner the better | |
| Stage II completed treatment | Observation | >8 | Ct scan every 4 mo | Consider CT scan but perform remote follow-up |
| Stage IV | ||||
| Stage IV with actionable targets | ||||
| Untreated | Targeted therapy | <2 | Start on time, perform safety assessments as laboratory or ECG, but do phone clinic instead of in-person visit. Consider performing response assessment after 2 mo | |
| On treatment with disease control targeted therapy | <2 | May expand the disease assessment for 3 mo if clinically stable or longer if on treatment for a long period of time | Do virtual clinics for toxicity notation, management, and any sign of disease progression | |
| Stage IV wild-type | ||||
| Untreated | Chemotherapy alone | <2 | Standard | Consider less immune suppressive agents and use of growth factors or dose reduction as appropriate |
| Chemotherapy and immune therapy combination | <2 | Standard | Need to be very selective | |
| Immune therapy single agent | <2 | Standard | Preferred if PD-L1 score >50% consider the approved longer interval of dosing | |
| On treatment first line | Chemotherapy | |||
| Chemotherapy and immunotherapy | <2 | May do imaging every 3 cycles, if stable | Consider growth factor, aim for a lesser number of cycles (4, if disease stable), and switch to maintenance | |
| Immune therapy | <2 | May do imaging every 3 mo, if stable | Consider switching to maintenance as early as indicated, use a longer interval of administration. Skip cycles if appropriate | |
| <2 | May do imaging every 3 cycles, if stable. | Use approved longer dosing intervals and stop at 2 y. | ||
| On treatment beyond first-line | Chemotherapy | <2 or 2–8 | Extend CT scan to 3 or 4 cycles, if clinically stable | Consider chemotherapy holidays for 2–3 cycles interval. |
| Immunotherapy | <2 or 2–8 | Extend disease assessment interval | Use approved longer dosing intervals | |
| No evidence of disease | Observation | >8 | Extend interval of workup | refer to survival clinics |
| Presence of disease | Observation | 2–8 | Extend the interval of workup | per phone clinic |
CT computed tomography; ECG, electrocardiogram; G-CSF, granulocyte-colony stimulating factor; PD-L1, programmed death-ligand 1; SBRT, stereotactic body radiation therapy.
Prioritizing Treatment Options for SCLC
| Clinical Scenario | Treatment Recommendation | Initial Delay, wk | Workup | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Limited Stage | ||||
| Untreated | Concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy | <2 | standard | if radiation therapy is not available start with chemotherapy and add XRT as early as possible |
| On treatment | Concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy followed by chemotherapy | <2 | standard | continue with CCRT, keep cycles of chemotherapy to 4, use growth factors away from XRT |
| Completed treatment | PCI | 2–8 | standard | |
| Observation | >8 | may delay imaging for a mo | Flow up by teleclinic | |
| Extensive Stage | ||||
| Untreated | Chemotherapy | <2 | standard | should start on time. Consider growth factors or dose reduction, consider oral etoposide for d 2 and 3 |
| Chemotherapy and immunotherapy | <2 | standard | Be selective | |
| On treatment | chemotherapy | <2 | may extend assessment for 3 cycles if stable | |
| Chemotherapy and immunotherapy | <2 | |||
| Completed treatment | Observation | 2–8 | May extend up to 2 mo | if asymptomatic by teleclinic |
CCRT, concurrent chemoradiation therapy; PCI, prophylactic cranial irradiation; XRT, radiation therapy.
Miscellaneous Issues Related to Lung Cancer
| Lung cancer screening | All activities should be halted for the screening of asymptomatic patients. |
| Suspected cancer cases | To be reviewed by virtual multidisciplinary team and decide case by case. |
| Smoking cessation | Impact of coronavirus disease 2019 on lung should energize tobacco control efforts. |