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Postsurgical adjuvant therapy in stages I, II, and IIIA non-small cell lung cancer
Authors:T E Lad
Affiliation:University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago.
Abstract:
The prognostic importance of accurate staging of non-small cell lung cancer was established in 1974 and reaffirmed and refined in 1986. The concept of adjuvant therapy after pulmonary resection for lung cancer is justified by the behavior of the disease. The best available data pertinent to adjuvant therapy of lung cancer have been collected by The Lung Cancer Study Group over the past 13 years. These data are based on a commitment to prospective and standardized surgical staging as a basis for large-scale prospective randomized control trials. A treatment effect of combination chemotherapy has been detected for stage II and IIIA nonsquamous cancer and is suggested for squamous cancer as well. This treatment effect is of marginal clinical significance. Adjuvant therapy for stage I disease has not shown a detectable benefit. Adjuvant radiation therapy for stage II and IIIA squamous cell carcinoma likewise has not resulted in survival benefit. Systemic metastasis continues to be the major clinical problem in lung cancer treatment, and better systemic therapy is necessary to improve the outcome in this disease. However, some patients do benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy, and efforts to identify such patients prospectively are also the subject of current clinical research.
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