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Lung Neoplasms. Sanjay Munireddy Dept of Surgery Sinai Hospital of Baltimore June17, 2008. Overview. Leading cause of cancer-related death among men and women and 2nd most common cause of overall mortality in US Estimated new cases in 2008: 215,020 Estimated deaths in 2008: 161,840.
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Lung Neoplasms Sanjay Munireddy Dept of Surgery Sinai Hospital of Baltimore June17, 2008
Overview • Leading cause of cancer-related death among men and women and 2nd most common cause of overall mortality in US • Estimated new cases in 2008: 215,020 • Estimated deaths in 2008: 161,840
Epidemiology • Recent continued decline in incidence among men (79.4 cases per 100,00) • Stabilization of incidence in women (52.6 cases per 100,00) • Greatest incidence in AA men (107.6 cases per 100,000) NCI SEER Cancer Data
Risk Factors • Smoking • Second hand smoke • Sex - men • Race - African American • Environmental gases - Asbestos, radon, tar soot, arsenic, silica etc. • Excessive alcohol use • Radiation therapy to chest • Family history of lung cancer
Smoking • Greatest risk factor; dose-response relationship between the number of pack-years smoked and lung cancer risk • 87% of all lung cancer deaths result from smoking • Death rates decrease to that of never-smokers after 10 yrs of smoking cessation
1999 WHO Classification of Lung Tumors • Epithelial • Malignant • Squamous cell carcinoma • Small cell carcinoma • Adenocarcinoma • Large cell carcinoma • Adenosquamous cell carcinoma • Carcinomas with pleomorphic, sarcomatoid or sarcomatous elements • Carcinoid tumor
Types • Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) • Comprise 80% of lung tumors • 50% are metastatic at diagnosis • Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) • Comprise 20% • 80% are metastatic at diagnosis
Adenocarcinoma of Lung • Most common type of lung cancer • Comprises 30-40% in smokers and 60-80% in non-smokers • Arises from terminal bronchioles • Usually develops in the peripheral portions of the lung • Slow growing than squamous cell ca. • Often is associated with a peripheral scar or honeycombing due to response to tumor
Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Lung • Comprise 25-40% of lung cancers; rates are declining due to reduction in smoking • Dose-response relationship of smoking is strongest with this type of cancer • Usually occurs in the lung’s central portions or in one of the main airway branches. • Can form cavities in the lung if they grow to a large size • Slow growing
Large Cell Carcinoma of Lung • Accounts for 10-15% of lung tumors • Diagnosis of exclusion; cannot diagnose on small biopsies or in lymph node metastases • Usually large peripheral mass with necrosis • Often associated with peripheral eosinophilia and leukocytosis, due to tumor production of colony stimulating factor
Small Cell Carcinoma of Lung • Also called undifferentiated or oat cell carcinoma • Accounts for 10-15% of lung tumors • Almost always caused by smoking • Fast growing compared to NSCLC • Usually metastatic in about 70% of cases at the time of diagnosis • Without treatment, has the most aggressive clinical course of any type of pulmonary tumor • Median survival from diagnosis of only 2 to 4 months.
Clinical Presentation • Majority are symptomatic at presentation (>85%) • Symptoms are broadly classified as • Due to lung lesion • Due to intra-thoracic spread • Due to distant mets • Due to paraneoplastic syndrome
Clinical Presentation • Symptoms due to lung lesion/primary tumor • Coughing ± sputum • Dyspnea • Hemoptysis • Chest pain • Wheezing • Weight loss
Clinical Presentation • Central tumors (squamous cell carcinomas) generally produce symptoms of cough, dyspnea, atelectasis, wheezing, postobstructive pneumonia,, and hemoptysis. • Most peripheral tumors are adenocarcinomas or large cell carcinomas and, in addition to causing cough and dyspnea, can cause symptoms due to pleural effusion and severe pain as a result of infiltration of parietal pleura and the chest wall.
Clinical Presentation • Symptoms of intra-thoracic spread • Pleural or pericardial effusion • Compression of RLN (hoarseness), phrenic nerve palsy (elevated diaphragm), pressure on the sympathetic plexus (Horner syndrome) • Tracheal obstruction, esophageal compression, SVC syndrome • Superior sulcus tumors can cause compression of the brachial plexus roots as they exit the neural foramina, resulting in intense, radiating neuropathic pain in the ipsilateral upper extremity.
Clinical Presentation • Symptoms of distant spread • May occur in almost every organ system • Bone mets (vertebrae, ribs, pelvis are MC) • Hepatic mets (indicate poor prognosis) • Brain mets (headache, nausea, vomiting, seizures, confusion, personality changes
Clinical Presentation • Paraneoplastic syndromes (10%) • Squamous cell carcinoma: hypercalcemia due to parathyroidlike hormone production. • Adenocarcinomas: Clubbing, hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy and the Trousseau syndrome of hypercoagulability • Small cell carcinomas: SIADH, Ectopic ACTH production, Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome
Diagnosis • History & physical • Wt. loss, respiratory distress • Lymphadenopathy • Horner syndrome • SVC syndrome (usually SCLC) • Absence of breath sounds, dullness, pleural effusions • Bone pain • Neurological deficits
Diagnosis • CXR • Sputum cytologic studies: centrally located endobronchial tumors exfoliate malignant cells into sputum • Thoracentesis • FNAB • Bronchoscopy with BAL, brushings, biopsies • Staging work-up • Local extent • Distant spread
Staging • In the United States, the standard staging workup includes at least the following: • Complete history and physical examination • CT scan of the chest and upper abdomen (including liver and adrenals) • Complete blood cell counts • Liver and kidney functions tests • Serum electrolytes
Staging • Local extent • Cervical mediastinoscopy • Left anterior mediastinotomy • Distant spread • CT or Ultrasound of the abdomen • liver, adrenals • Bone scan • CT head • MRI • PET scan
Management • Functional Evaluation • Evaluation of performance and pulmonary status should be completed before discussing treatment options • Pulmonary function testing, specifically forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) and carbon monoxide diffusion in the lung (DLCO) measurements, is a helpful predictor of morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing lung resection
Management • Functional Evaluation • Patients with an FEV1 or DLCO value less than 80 percent of predicted require additional testing. • calculation of postresection pulmonary reserve (with ventilation and perfusion scans or by accounting for the number of segments removed); cardiopulmonary exercise testing; and arterial blood gas sampling • Patients with a predicted postoperative FEV1 or DLCO value less than 40 percent and a VO2max value less than 10 mL per kg per minute or an SaO2 value less than 90 percent are at high risk of perioperative death or complications