| Literature DB >> 33293670 |
Abstract
For stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), approximately a third of patients survive up to 5 years, with decreasing 5-year survival rates for stage IIIB and stage IIIC disease. Although curable, stage III NSCLC encompasses a diverse range of disease presentation, with an equally complex range of multi-modal treatment options, including systemic and local therapies for distant and local disease control, respectively. This complexity results in a number of challenges for the multi-disciplinary team (MDT) in achieving optimal treatment outcomes for patients. As multi-modality treatment is the preferred treatment strategy for all stage III disease, the focus of this article is the key surgical, chemotherapy and radiotherapy clinical trials as well as guidelines that currently outline radical therapy options for patients with both potentially resectable and unresectable stage III NSCLC.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33293670 PMCID: PMC7735211 DOI: 10.1038/s41416-020-01069-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Differences in stage III NSCLC tumour stage classification criteria between the seventh and eighth edition of the tumour, node and metastases classification of lung cancer.
| Stage | Seventh edition TNM | Eighth edition TNM |
|---|---|---|
| T3 | A primary tumour >7 cm Or a tumour that invades: • Parietal pleura • Chest wall • Phrenic nerve • Diaphragm • Mediastinal pleura • Pericardium Or a tumour <2 cm from the carina in the main bronchi Or a tumour causing atelectasis/obstructive pneumonitis of the entire lung Or a tumour with a separate tumour nodule in the same lobe | A primary tumour >5 cm but ≤7 cm Or a tumour that invades: • Parietal pleura • Chest wall • Phrenic nerve • Pericardium Or a tumour with a separate tumour nodule in the same lobe |
| T4 | A tumour that invades: • Mediastinum • Heart • Great vessels • Trachea • Recurrent laryngeal nerve • Oesophagus • Vertebral body • Carina Or a tumour with a separate tumour nodule in a different ipsilateral lobe | A primary tumour >7 cm Or a primary tumour that invades: • Diaphragm • Mediastinum • Heart • Great vessels • Trachea • Recurrent laryngeal nerve • Oesophagus • Vertebral body • Carina Or a tumour with a separate tumour nodule in a different ipsilateral lobe |
This table was created by the author using guidance from refs. [44,45]
Differences in stage III NSCLC tumour stage classification between the seventh and eighth edition of the tumour, node and metastases classification of lung cancer.
| Stage | Seventh edition TNM | Eighth edition TNM |
|---|---|---|
| T3 N1 M0 | IIIA | IIIA |
| T4 N0 M0 | IIIA | IIIA |
| T4 N1 M0 | IIIA | IIIA |
| T1 N2 M0 | IIIA | IIIA |
| T2 N2 M0 | IIIA | IIIA |
| T3 N2 M0 | IIIA | IIIB |
| T4 N2 M0 | IIIB | IIIB |
| T1 N3 M0 | IIIB | IIIB |
| T2 N3 M0 | IIIB | IIIB |
| T3 N3 M0 | IIIB | IIIC |
| T4 N3 M0 | IIIB | IIIC |
This table was created by the author using guidance from refs. [5,44,45]
Fig. 12017 treatment of stage IIIA and IIIB NSCLC in the UK.
This figure was created by the author from data published in the UK NLCA annual report 2018.[8] adj adjuvant, BSC best supportive care, chemo chemotherapy, PI palliative intent, RT radiotherapy.
Proposed definition of ‘potentially resectable stage III NSCLC’.
| • Pathologically confirmed NSCLC |
| • Thorough pathological nodal staging completed (surgical or endoscopic) |
| • Thorough radiological staging including at least PET-CT and MRI brain with contrast |
| • Primary tumour resectable with high probability of clear pathological margins and complete resection |
| • Any nodal disease is discrete, easily measurable and defined, free from major mediastinal structures including the great vessels and trachea with no individual lymph node measuring >3 cm |
This table was created by the author using guidance from ref. [46]
MRI magnetic resonance imaging, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, PET-CT positron emission tomography–computed tomography.
Summary of UK, European and American guidelines on the management of potentially resectable N2 NSCLC.
| Guideline | Definition of ‘resectable’ | Recommendations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| BTS and SCTS (2010) | Non-fixed lymph nodes Non-bulky lymph nodes Single-zone N2 disease Reasonable chance of: Complete resection Clear pathological margins | Consider surgery as part of multi-modality treatment in non-fixed, non-bulky, single-zone N2 NSCLC Further research into the role of surgery in non-fixed, non-bulky, multi-zone N2 NSCLC | Significant weight placed on IASLC staging database outcomes despite lack of comparator group and lack of clinical N2 Guidelines consider evidence for adjuvant chemotherapy more robust than pre-operative chemotherapy |
| ACCP (2013) | Discrete lymph nodes Easily measurable and defined lymph nodes Free from major structures, such as the great vessels and trachea | Definitive CRT or induction therapy (chemotherapy or CRT) followed by surgery Surgery followed by adjuvant chemotherapy not recommended | Does not support the concept that surgery can only be justified in patients with minimal N2 disease Pre-operative chemotherapy better than surgery alone in all NSCLC (small studies) and therefore surgery plus adjuvant chemotherapy is not recommended |
| ESMO (2015) | Minimal, non-bulky N2 disease Single-station N2 disease | Definitive CRT, induction chemotherapy followed by surgery or induction CRT followed by surgery | Paramount importance of an experienced and high-volume multi-disciplinary team (MDT) and treatment centres able to minimise risk and complications from multi-modality treatment highlighted |
| NCCN (2018) | Low-volume lymph nodes Non-invasive lymph nodes Pathologically proven Measuring <3 cm | Definitive CRT or induction chemotherapy followed by surgery or induction CRT followed by surgery Maintenance durvalumab following cCRT | Benefit from pre-operative chemotherapy is similar to that of post-operative chemotherapy and either approach is justified |
| NICE (2019) | None provided | Consider CRT followed by surgery | CRT followed by surgery improves PFS and might improve survival compared with CRT alone |
This table was created by the author using guidance from refs. [15,23,24,31,34]
ACCP American College of Chest Physicians, BTS British Thoracic Society, CRT chemoradiotherapy, cCRT concurrent chemoradiotherapy, ESMO European Society of Medical Oncology, IASLC International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer, NICE National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, NCCN National Comprehensive Cancer Network, NSCLC non-small cell lung cancer, PFS progression-free survival, SCTS The Society for Cardiothoracic Surgery in Great Britain and Ireland.