lung cancer

Small Cell Lung Cancer: A Review

Author/s: 
So Yeon Kim, Henry S Park, Anne C Chiang

Importance: Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) is a high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma with an incidence of 4.7 cases per 100 000 individuals in 2021 in the US and a 5-year overall survival of 12% to 30%.

Observations: Cigarette smoking is the primary risk factor for development of SCLC, as 95% of patients diagnosed with SCLC have a history of tobacco use. Patients with SCLC may present with respiratory symptoms such as cough (40%), shortness of breath (34%), hemoptysis (10%), or metastases with corresponding local symptoms (30%) such as pleuritis or bone pain; approximately 60% of patients with SCLC may be asymptomatic at diagnosis. Chest imaging may demonstrate central hilar (85%) or mediastinal lymphadenopathy (75%). At diagnosis, approximately 15% of patients have brain metastases, which may present as headache or focal weakness. Diagnosis is confirmed by biopsy of a primary lung mass, thoracic lymph node, or metastatic lesion. Small cell lung cancer is classified into limited stage (LS-SCLC; 30%) vs extensive stage (ES-SCLC; 70%) based on whether the disease can be treated within a radiation field that is typically confined to 1 hemithorax but may include contralateral mediastinal and supraclavicular nodes. For patients with LS-SCLC, surgery or concurrent chemotherapy with platinum-etoposide and radiotherapy is potentially curative in 30% of patients. More recently, median survival for LS-SCLC has reached up to 55.9 months with the addition of durvalumab, an immunotherapy. First-line treatment for ES-SCLC is combined treatment with platinum-etoposide chemotherapy and immunotherapy with the programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 (PD-L1) inhibitors durvalumab or atezolizumab followed by maintenance immunotherapy until disease progression or toxicity. Although initial rates of tumor shrinkage are 60% to 70% with platinum-etoposide and immunotherapy treatment, the median overall survival of patients treated for ES-SCLC is approximately 12 to 13 months, with 60% of patients relapsing within 3 months. Second-line therapy for patients with ES-SCLC includes the DNA-alkylating agent lurbinectedin (35% overall response rate; median progression-free survival, 3.7 months) and a bispecific T-cell engager against delta-like ligand 3, tarlatamab (40% overall response rate; median progression-free survival, 4.9 months).

Conclusions and relevance: Small cell lung cancer is a smoking-related malignancy that presents at an advanced stage in 70% of patients. Three-year overall survival is approximately 56.5% for LS-SCLC and 17.6% for ES-SCLC. First-line treatment for LS-SCLC is radiation targeting the tumor given concurrently with chemotherapy and followed by consolidation immunotherapy. For ES-SCLC, first-line treatment is chemotherapy and immunotherapy followed by maintenance immunotherapy.

Cancer-Specific Mortality, All-Cause Mortality, and Overdiagnosis in Lung Cancer Screening Trials: A Meta-Analysis

Author/s: 
Ebell, M.H., Bentivegna, M., Hulme, C.

Abstract

Purpose: Benefit of lung cancer screening using low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) in reducing lung cancer-specific and all-cause mortality is unclear. We undertook a meta-analysis to assess its associations with outcomes.

Methods: We searched the literature and previous systematic reviews to identify randomized controlled trials comparing LDCT screening with usual care or chest radiography. We performed meta-analysis using a random effects model. The primary outcomes were lung cancer-specific mortality, all-cause mortality, and the cumulative incidence ratio of lung cancer between screened and unscreened groups as a measure of overdiagnosis.

Results: Meta-analysis was based on 8 trials with 90,475 patients that had a low risk of bias. There was a significant reduction in lung cancer-specific mortality with LDCT screening (relative risk = 0.81; 95% CI, 0.74-0.89); the estimated absolute risk reduction was 0.4% (number needed to screen = 250). The reduction in all-cause mortality was not statistically significant (relative risk = 0.96; 95% CI, 0.92-1.01), but the absolute reduction was consistent with that for lung cancer-specific mortality (0.34%; number needed to screen = 294). In the studies with the longest duration of follow-up, the incidence of lung cancer was 25% higher in the screened group, corresponding to a 20% rate of overdiagnosis.

Conclusions: This meta-analysis showing a significant reduction in lung cancer-specific mortality, albeit with a tradeoff of likely overdiagnosis, supports recommendations to screen individuals at elevated risk for lung cancer with LDCT.

Keywords: cancer screening; health services; low-dose computed tomography; lung cancer; mass screening; overdiagnosis; preventive medicine; public health.

© 2020 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.

Lung Cancer Screening: A Clinician’s Checklist

This checklist was developed to help clinicians meet the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) criteria for a lung cancer screening counseling and shared decisionmaking visit. All of the criteria listed below must be met for the screening to be covered as a preventive service benefit under Medicare.

Lung cancer screening with low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) reduces mortality from lung cancer. There are also potential harms associated with lung cancer screening, including a high-false positive rate and the associated need for diagnostic followup, known and unknown risks of additional testing associated with incidental findings, cumulative radiation exposure, and overdiagnosis. Shared decisionmaking is a collaborative patient-centered process in which patients and clinicians make decisions together, within the context of the best evidence and recommendations and based on the patient’s values and preferences.

Subscribe to lung cancer