Small cell lung cancer

From IDWiki

Background

  • A form of lung cancer that is almost exclusively in smokers, particularly in heavy smokers

Risk Factors

  • Tobacco smoking
  • Second-hand smoke
  • Asbestos exposure
  • Radon exposure

Clinical Presentation

  • May be detected in asymptomatic patients as an incidental finding
  • Potential symptoms include cough, dyspnea, weight loss, and functional decline
  • On imaging, there is most commonly a central, hilar mass with bulky mediastinal lymphadenopathy
  • About 70% have metastatic disease at presentation, including liver, adrenal glands, bone, bone marrow, and brain

Staging

TMN

  • Stage 1: a single lesion ≤3 cm with no lymphadenopathy
  • Stage 2: ipsilateral lymph nodes and mediastinum
  • Stage 3: contralateral lymph nodes and metastases
  • Stage 4: distant metastases

VALSG

  • Limited stage: disease confined to ipsilateral lung, lymph nodes, and mediastinum, which can be contained within one radiotherapy window
  • Extensive stage: metastasis to contralateral lung, contralateral lymph nodes, or distant sites

Management

Stage 1

  • Potentially curative
  • Surgical resection
    • If lymph nodes negative, adjuvant chemotherapy
    • If lymph nodes positive, adjuvant chemoradiotherapy
  • The adjuvant chemotherapy is platinum-based

Stage 2/Limited Stage

  • Not curative
  • Early chemoradiotherapy

Stage 3 or 4/Extensive Stage

  • Not curative
  • Chemotherapy extends median survival from 3 months to 8 to 13 months
  • Prophylactic cranial irradiation