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2. Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer. The Wellness Community provides a free program of emotional support, education and hope for people with cancer and their loved ones.. 3. Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer. The Wellness Community Patient Active Concept
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3. 3 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer The Wellness Community
Patient Active Concept
“Cancer patients who participate in their fight for recovery along with their healthcare team will improve the quality of their lives and may enhance the possibility of recovery.”
4. 4 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer The Wellness Community
national non-profit organization
21 locations nationwide + 2 international
over 12,000 support group sessions
138,000 visits each year
Research, publications
The Virtual Wellness Community
5. 5 The Wellness Community Programs Weekly patient support groups
Weekly family support groups
Diagnosis specific networking groups
Bereavement groups
Educational programs
Nutritional education
Stress reduction programs (Tai Chi, Yoga, etc.)
Exercise programs
Children’s programs
Resource library
Social activities
6. 6 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
“What You Need to
Know About Lung Cancer
& Its Treatment”
7. 7 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
Powerful facts:
177,000 cases annually
Lung cancer is the #1 cause of cancer-related deaths by far in the U.S.
…more than breast, prostate, and colon cancer combined.
8. 8 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Risk Factors:
Smoking (90% of all cases)
Second-hand smoke (25% of non-smoker cases)
Occupational/environmental
9. 9 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)
Comprises 85% of all lung cancers
Types of NSCLC:
Adenocarcinoma (most common)
Squamous cell
Bronchoalveolar Carcinoma
Large Cell Carcinoma
Adenosquamous
10. 10 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)
Comprises 15-20% of all lung cancers
Spreads more aggressively than NSCLC
Is more responsive to chemotherapy
Frequently found in smokers or former smokers
11. 11 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Stages of Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
Stage I confined to lung tissue alone
Stage II lung tissue and lymph nodes in lung
Stage III lung tissue and lymph nodes outside of the lung
Stage IV distant spread (liver, adrenal glands, bone, brain, other sites)
12. 12 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
LUNG CANCER STAGING (TNM)
T= Primary tumor size (T1-T4)
N= Lymph node involvement (N1-N3)
M= Distant metastasis (M0-M1)
13. 13 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Treatment of Stage I NSCLC
Evaluate for surgery
Surgery alone is the standard of care
Pathologic stage I: 67% cure
Clinical trials are evaluating the value of adjuvant (after surgery) therapy
14. 14 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Treatment of Stage II NSCLC
Evaluate for type of surgery
Surgery alone is the standard of care
Pathologic stage II: 40-50% cure
Clinical trials are evaluating the value of adjuvant (after surgery) therapy
15. 15 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer ‘Theoretical’ Advantages of Combining Different Types of Cancer Therapies
Chemotherapy:
?Controls micro-metastases that may be responsible for systemic recurrence after “successful” surgery
?Acts synergistically with XRT to downstage NSCLC and make tumor-free margin surgery more likely
Radiation Therapy
? “Sterilizes” surgical margins making local recurrence less likely
16. 16 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Summary: Treatment Stage I & II NSCLC
Surgery is the standard of care
Neoadjuvant (given before surgery) therapy is promising
Adjuvant (given after surgery) chemotherapy or radiation therapy show no improvement
17. 17 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Stage III Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
2 types: Stage IIIA and Stage IIIB
Radiation alone was the standard care until 1990’s
Chemotherapy + radiation is the new standard based on results of clinical trials
Newer radiation techniques minimize side effects of treatment
18. 18 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
19. 19 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Stage III A Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
Bulky vs. minimal disease
Chemotherapy + radiation
Commonly used chemotherapy drugs:
Platinum-based
Non-platinum based
Role of surgery undefined
20. 20 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Stage III B Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
Pleural effusion affects treatment plan
Chemotherapy + radiation or radiation alone
Commonly used chemotherapy drugs:
Platinum-based
Non-platinum based
21. 21 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Treatment of Stage IIIB-IV NSCLC
Reduce Chemotherapy Toxicity
Recent study: Combination of 2 drugs provide same benefit as 3, but with fewer side effects:
Less nausea/vomiting
Less hair loss
Less nerve damage
Lower risk of infection
Gemcitabine + vinorelbine slightly less toxicity but equivalent response
(Cancer, Vol. 95, No. 6, 2002)
22. 22 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
Stage IV NSCLC
NCI Recommended First-Line Chemotherapy:
gemcitabine + cisplatin
paclitaxel + carboplatin or cisplatin
vinorelbine + cisplatin
docetaxel + cisplatin
Other drug combinations
23. 23 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Treatment of Recurrent NSCLC
Challenges of decision-making
General health status of the patient
Several treatment options with equivalent results but widely varying side effects
Balancing quality of life with side effects
Patient’s goals and wishes
24. 24 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Treatment of Recurrent NSCLC
NCI Recommended treatment options:
Chemotherapy
vinorelbine + cisplatin
paclitaxel +cisplatin or carboplatin
gemcitabine + cisplatin
docetaxel + cisplatin
Other drug combinations
Palliative radiation therapy to relieve symptoms
25. 25 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Treatment of Small Cell Lung Cancer
Limited stage: chemo+ xrt =standard of care
etoposide + cisplatin + radiation
cisplatin + irinotecan
Extensive stage: first-line chemotherapy
etoposide (VP-16) + cisplatin (or carboplatin)+ radiation
cisplatin + irinotecan
CAV, CAE in clinical trials
26. 26 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Treatment of Recurrent Small Cell Lung Cancer
Possible Chemotherapy Agents:
topotecan (Hycamtin): only FDA-approved drug for recurrent disease
oral etoposide (VP-16)
paclitaxel (Taxol)
irinotecan/CPT-11 (Camptosar)
CAV
others in clinical trials
Palliative radiation to relieve symptoms
27. 27 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Newer Strategies: Targeted Therapy
Chemotherapy targets general features of cells, including both cancer cells and normal cells
Normal cells usually recover, while cancer cells may not
However, chemotherapy is associated with side effects
28. 28 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors
Angiogenesis
Antisense
Protein Kinase C
C-kit PDGF-r
Cox-2
Ras inhibitors
Raf inhibitors
Map kinase
Others
29. 29 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors
Iressa (AstraZeneca)
Tarceva (Genentech)
Erbitux (Imclone, BMS)
Many others in development
30. 30 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Angiogenesis Inhibitors
“Angio”=blood vessel, “Genesis”=formation or beginning
Many agents being tested to inhibit this process:
Anti-VEGF
Thalidomide
Angiostatin/Endostatin
Anti-VEGF tyrosine kinase inhibitors
Others
31. 31 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Antisense Drugs
Affinitac (Lilly)
Antisense drug to protein kinase C
Phase II studies completed combining with chemotherapy
Evaluating effectiveness in recurrent lung cancer
Phase III trials underway comparing chemotherapy + drug
32. 32 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
“What You Need to
Know About Lung Cancer
& Its Treatment”
Questions and Discussion
33. 33 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
PATIENT ACTIVE BREAK
34. 34 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer “Issues to Discuss With Your Doctor When Making Decisions About Lung Cancer Treatment:
A Patient Active Approach”
35. 35 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Making decisions about cancer treatment is a complex and sometimes overwhelming experience.
You have choices. But you need to be informed & you need to evaluate many aspects of your care.
36. 36 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer What is the goal of my cancer therapy?
Is it prolongation of life?
Is to control symptoms?
Is it palliation?
37. 37 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer What is a clinical trial and would one be a reasonable treatment option for me?
What are the risks and benefits?
38. 38 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Clinical Trial Definitions
Phase I-new drug/treatment well-tested in the lab now testing toxicity in people
Phase II-new drug/treatment has given good preliminary results-test feasibility
Phase III-compares new drug/treatment vs standard of care
39. 39 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer What are the risks of treatment?
What are the risks of no treatment?
Should I seek a second opinion?
40. 40 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Are there some treatments that have equal benefit, but fewer or different
side effects?
Can we discuss which side effects I would be most concerned about having or preventing?
41. 41 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer How do we balance my quality of life with my need for effective treatment?
How will we know that the treatment is working?
What can I expect to happen to me as the cancer progresses?
42. 42 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Can I continue to work or maintain my other daily activities during treatment?
If I have pain, what should I do?
Nausea & vomiting?
Fatigue?
Risk of infection?
43. 43 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Why do some people who smoke get lung cancer while others don’t?
Why did I get lung cancer if I never smoked?
44. 44 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer
What kind of supportive resources are available to me and my family?
What can I expect from an emotional perspective?
45. 45 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Questions to Ask Yourself:
What can I do to be a stronger partner with my physician & health care team?
What is my goal of therapy and have I expressed that to my physician?
46. 46 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Am I ready and willing to participate fully and actively in my treatment plan?
Do I know what the potential side effects of therapy are and how best to prevent or manage them?
Have I communicated with my physician what ‘quality of life’ means to me?
47. 47 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer How will I (and my family) address the emotional issues of living with lung cancer?
Is a support group right for me (and/or my family)?
48. 48 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Making decisions about lung cancer and its treatment is never easy.
By being informed & partnering with your physician & health care team, you can improve the quality of your life and may enhance the possibility of your recovery.
49. 49 Frankly Speaking About Lung Cancer Making Decisions About Lung Cancer Treatment
Questions and Discussion