Lung Cancer Treatment: Surgical Approaches

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Matthew Kilmurry, M.D. St. Mary’s General Hospital Grand River Hospital

Transcript of Lung Cancer Treatment: Surgical Approaches

Page 1: Lung Cancer Treatment: Surgical Approaches

Matthew Kilmurry, M.D.

St. Mary’s General Hospital

Grand River Hospital

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I have no conflicts of interest

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The problem

2003 numbers for Ontario7500 new cases6300 deaths

Only 25% of cases are surgically resectable

Breast cancer in 2007 was 8000 new cases and 2000 deaths

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Causes

Smoking Radon exposure Asbestos exposure Second hand smoke Genetics

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Types of Lung Cancer

Primary Secondary

Colonic metsOther primaries

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Resection of pulmonary mets Several prognostic factors

Disease free intervalNumber of metsResectability

30% long term survival Do not assume it is a met

Old study suggests 73% of pulmonary nodules in patients with previous cancer will be new primary

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Primary lung cancer

Small cell Non small cell

Accounts for 75-80 % of primary lung tumors

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Screening

No accepted screening methodStudies using CT, CXR and sputum

High index of suspicionsmokers

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Staging

Stage I: no lymph node involvement Stage II: lymph nodes involved or tumor

invading into chest wall Stage III: mediastinal nodal involvement

or bad tumour factors Stage IV: metastatic disease

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Nodal stations

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Surgical Approach

Diagnosis: Is this cancer? Metastases: Is there spread? Suitability: Is the patient healthy enough

for surgery?

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Diagnosis

History and physical Chest X-ray CT scan Percutaneous biopsy Bronchoscopy

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Metastases

History and physical Upper abdominal imaging Bone scan and CT head PET scan Mediastinoscopy

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Nodal stations

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Suitability

History and physical PFT’s Cardiac investigations

2D echoStress testNuclear medicine

CPET Quantitative V/Q scan

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Treatment

Stage I and II are generally offered surgery with stage II getting post op chemo

Some stage III can be offered surgery – usually after chemoradiotherapy

Rare stage IV patients can be offered surgerySolitary brain mets

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Treatment

Lobectomy preferred approachLimited resection has higher recurrence and

worse long term suvival

Stage survival, 5 yearsStage I – 60-70%Stage II – 40-50%Stage III – 15-25%Stage IV – 0-10%

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Case # 1

65 year old male previous smoking history

Chest X-ray done as part of annual health exam

CT confirmed mass in LULSmall lesion also noted in RUL

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Case # 1

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Case # 1

Bronchoscopy and mediastinoscopy showed no evidence of mets

Thoracotomy confirmed diagnosis and had lobectomy

Right upper lobe nodule unchanged over two years

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Case # 2

68 year old woman had pneumonia like symptoms which led to chest X-ray

Smoker of 1 pack per day for 45 years

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Case # 2

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Case # 2

CT chest showed large tumour with no evidence of mets

Biopsy shows NSCLC PET scan shows no evidence of

metastatic disease

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Case # 2

Mediastinoscopy showed metastatic disease in lymph nodes

Referred for chemoradiotherapy Possible candidate for surgery

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Palliation

Majority of work with chemo and radiotherapy

Pain and symptom management vital Surgery sometimes required

Pleural effusionsEndobronchial tumours

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Thoracic DAU

Run through Grand River Cancer Center Multidisciplinary clinic with respirologists

and thoracic surgeons Referrals accepted through GRCC

Main criteria is newly abnormal chest X-ray

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Thoracic Program

Combined thoracic surgery at St. Mary’s General Hospital

CCO pushing to eliminate low volume thoracic centers

Working to keep thoracic surgery in Kitchener-Waterloo

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Conclusions

Lung cancer is a major health concern in Ontario

Surgery offers best chance for cure in resectable cases

Multidisciplinary care required and available in our region