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Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC. A 62-year old man with symptoms of brain metastasis and a lung tumor. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC. 62-year old male Smoker (~40 pack years) No history of serious illnesses, no weight loss Developed severe nausea plus headache in Feb 2001; collapsed on Feb 2
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1. Patient Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC Robert Pirker Medical University of Vienna
2. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC A 62-year old man
with symptoms of brain metastasis
and a lung tumor
3. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC 62-year old male
Smoker (~40 pack years)
No history of serious illnesses, no weight loss
Developed severe nausea plus headache in Feb 2001; collapsed on Feb 27, 2001
Admission to hospital
4. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC 178 cm, 82 kg, ECOG-1
Heart & lung normal, RR 140/80, 80/min
Liver & spleen normal
No enlarged lymph nodes
No edema
No signs of neurological deficits
5. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC MRI of the brain: Lesion (~ 2 cm) fronto-basal on the right site plus edema
6. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC MRI of the brain: Lesion (~ 2 cm) fronto-basal on the right site plus edema
Chest X-ray: Suspicion of tumor in left lung
CT Scan of thorax & upper abdomen: Tumor left upper lobe (~ 3.5 cm) No enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes Normal liver and adrenal glands
Bronchoscopy: Not done
9. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC 62-y old male smoker
ECOG 1
Lung cancer suspected
Single brain lesion
single lung lesion
cT2N0M1
clinical stage IV
10. Question Which additional staging procedure(s) surgery would
you perform?
PET Scan
2) Bone scan
Both PET & bone scan
Other(s)
None
11. Question Which of the following therapies would you recommend
as initial therapy for this patient with NSCLC stage IV ?
1) Surgical resection of cerebral metastasis
2) Stereotactic radiosurgery of brain metastasis +/-
whole-brain radiotherapy
3) Palliative chemotherapy
12. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC Dexamethasone
Resection of cerebral metastasis as initial therapy
March 20, 2001
Severe symptoms required rapid relief
Squamous cell carcinoma plus large cell carcinoma with neuroendocrine features, compatible with NSCLC
Rapid postoperative recovery
Nausea & headache disappeared
Postoperative whole-brain radiotherapy
30 Gy (May – June 2001)
13. Brain metastasis
Frequent in lung cancer
Synchronous
Metachronous
Therapy
Surgery
Stereotactic radiosurgery
Whole-brain radiotherapy
Disease status outside of the brain must be considered
14. Therapy of brain metastasisPeacock KH & Lesser GJ. Curr Treat Options Oncol 2006, 7, 479 Surgery
Single metastasis >3.5 cm
Immediate tumor relief necessary
Pathological diagnosis required
Small tumors with minimal edema & surgically accessible
Stereotactic radiosurgery
Metastasis <3.5 cm in surgically inaccessible areas
Patients not suited fur surgery
Small tumors with minimal edema (even when surgically accessible)
15. Stereotactic radiosurgery plus/minus whole-brain radiotherapyAoyama H et al. JAMA 2006, 295, 2483 142 patients, 1 - 4 metastases (< 3 cm)
SRS SRS+WBRT p value
Os median 8 mo 7.5 0.4
1-year 28% 38%
Brain relapse 76% 47% <0.001
Salvage therapy brain ?
WBRT decreases brain relapse rate but does not improve survival
16. Brain metastasis Metachronous
Better prognosis than synchronous lesions (33 vs. 9 months from time of diagnosis of NSCLC, p=0.001) but no difference from time of metastasis (12 vs. 8 months, p=0.5) Flannery TW et al. Lung Cancer 2003, 42, 327
Surgical resection + whole brain radiotherapy Patchell RA et al. NEJM 1990, 322, 494
Synchronous
Resection of brain metastasis + whole-brain radiotherapy Billing PS et al. J Thor Cardiovasc Surg 2001, 122, 548
Surgical resection of primary tumor ?
17. Question Which of the following therapies would you recommend for
this patient after resection of brain metastasis
Resection of the primary tumor
Resection of the primary tumor followed by systemic chemotherapy
Systemic chemotherapy
None
18. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC 62-y old male smoker
Surgery of primary tumor: Lobectomy left upper lobe + mediastinal lymphadenectomy (20.4.2001) complete tumor resection
Final diagnosis: NSCLC (squamous cell + large cell carcinoma) pT2pN0M1 pathological stage IV complete tumor resection
19. Question Which treatment would you recommend for this patient after
resection of the brain metastasis (plus whole-brain
radiotherapy) and after resection of the primary tumor
No further treatment
Systemic chemotherapy
20. Question Which of the following protocols would you use for
systemic chemotherapy in this patient with good performance
status and normal organ functions?
1) Cisplatin-based doublet
2) Carboplatin-based doublet
3) Non-platinum-based doublet
4) Other
21. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC Cisplatin/vinorelbine, 4 cycles
July - October 2001
Regular follow-up
No further smoking
CT scans thorax plus upper abdomen & MRI of the brain
Patient alive 6 years after initial diagnosis
Last follow-up on Jan 24, 2007
22. Unresectable NSCLC: Follow-upASCO guidelinesPfister DG et al. JCO 2004, 22, 3330 History & physical examination
every 3 months during first 2 years
every 6 months thereafter through year 5
yearly thereafter
Chest radiographs
Only in symptomatic patients
MRI brain
Only in symptomatic patients
Smoking cessation
23. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC Case 2:
43-year old female smoker
NSCLC IB (1999): lobectomy right upper lobe adjuvant chemotherapy (IALT)
2 metachronous brain lesions (June 2000): stereotactic radiosurgery of both lesions plus whole-brain radiotherapy
Continuous clinical remission in 2007
24. Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC Case 3:
53-year old male smoker
NSCLC IV (2005) with single brain metastasis: surgical resection + whole-brain radiotherapy lobectomy systemic chemotherapy
Brain relapse (June 2006): stereotactic radiosurgery
Currently stable disease
25. Patient Case Discussion Advanced NSCLC Summary Brain metastases are frequent in lung cancer (synchronous, metachronous)
Surgery, stereotactic radiosurgery, whole-brain radiotherapy
Resection of single brain metastasis and primary tumor can result in long-term survival in patients
with good performance status and
absence of mediastinal lymph node involvement
Resection or radiosurgery (+/- whole-brain radiotherapy) of metachronous single metastasis can also result in long-term survival
Not all of the treatment decisions were based on randomized trials
28. Question Which therapy would you recommend for this patient with
completely resected NSCLC stage IV ?
1) No further therapy
2) Adjuvant cranial irradiation
3) Chemotherapy
4) Chemotherapy and radiotherapy
29. Case studyNSCLC Brain metastasis frequent in patients with NSCLC
Patients with single brain metastasis lesion and single lung lesion benefit from surgical resection of both lesions
Postoperative cranial irradiation & systemic chemotherapy
30. Surgery in NSCLC IV Resection of single cerebral metastasis
Resection of lung metastasis
Single lung metastasis rare at initial diagnosis
Staging
Secondary primary
Resection of single bone lesion
Palliative
Resection of adrenal gland metastasis ??
Resection of liver metastasis
Single lesion is rare
Far advanced disease