As discussed in chapter 6, there are two major subdivisions of lung cancer:
small-cell lung cancer (SCLC), for which chemotherapy is the primary treatment,
and non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). SCLC is decreasing in frequency
in the United States, with recent data showing it represents only 14%
of lung cancers. This chapter provides information on the staging and prognosis,
pathology and pathophysiology, treatment, and follow-up of longterm
survivors of SCLC and concludes with brief discussions on mesothelioma
and thymoma.
Chapter 6 provides information on the epidemiology, etiology, screening
and prevention, and diagnosis of lung cancer in general and covers NSCLC
and carcinoid tumors of the lungs.
SMALL-CELL LUNG CANCER
Staging and prognosis
The TNM staging system, used for all NSCLC patients, does not predict well
for survival in SCLC patients and is generally not utilized in SCLC, except
for surgical staging (see chapter 6, Table 1). Rather, SCLC is usually described
as either limited (M0) or extensive (M1), although these general terms
are inadequate when evaluating the role of surgery. Patients with SCLC who
have stages I-III disease, excluding those with a malignant pleural effusion,
are classified as having limited disease. These patients constitute approximately
one-third of all SCLC patients. The remaining SCLC patients fall into
the extensive-disease category, which includes any patient with a malignant
pleural effusion or any site of distant disease-brain, liver, adrenal gland,
bone, bone marrow, and others.
The staging of lung cancer must be conducted in a methodical and detailed
manner to permit appropriate therapeutic recommendations and to allow
comparison of treatment results from different institutions.
Stage is commonly reported as either clinical or pathologic. The former is
based on noninvasive (or minimally invasive) tests, whereas the latter is based
on tissue obtained during surgery (see chapter 6).
The most important prognostic factor in lung cancer is the stage of disease.
Within a given disease stage, the next most important prognostic factors are
performance status and recent weight loss. The two scales used to define
performance status are the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG)
performance status system and the Karnofsky system (see Appendix 1). In
short, patients who are ambulatory have a significantly longer survival. Those
who have lost ≥ 5% of body weight during the preceding 3-6 months have a
worse prognosis.
Pathology and pathophysiology
SCLC tends to present with a large central lung mass and associated extensive
hilar and mediastinal lymphadenopathy. Clinically evident distant metastases
are present in approximately two-thirds of patients at diagnosis.
Additionally, data from autopsy examination indicate micrometastatic disease
in 63% of patients who died within 30 days of attempted curative resection
of SCLC. Thus, it is a systemic disease at presentation in the majority of
patients.
SCLC is a small, blue, round cell tumor that is primitive and undifferentiated
at the light microscopic level. Electron microscopy demonstrates its neuroendocrine
derivation by the presence of dense core granules. The immunohistochemical
evidence of neuroendocrine derivation includes positive staining
for chromogranin, synaptophysin, and other proteins. The APUD (amine
precursor uptake and decarboxylation) machinery present in the dense core
granule leads to the production of biologically active amines and promotes
the synthesis of polypeptide hormones such as ADH and ACTH. Paraneoplastic
syndromes due to hormone excess result. The most common of
these syndromes, syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion
(SIADH), occurs in approximately 10% of patients with SCLC.
Hypercortisolism and a Cushing's-like syndrome are more rare, seen in only
1%-2% of patients.
Treatment
TREATMENT OF DISEASE LIMITED TO LUNG PARENCHYMA
Surgery
The majority of patients with SCLC present with advanced-stage disease. In
the 5%-10% of patients whose tumor is limited to the lung parenchyma, very often the diagnosis is established only after the lung mass has been removed.
If, however, the histology has been determined by bronchoscopic biopsy or
fine-needle aspiration and there is no evidence of metastatic disease following
extensive scanning, examination of the bone marrow, and biopsy of the
mediastinal lymph nodes, resection should be performed. Adjuvant chemotherapy
is recommended because of the high likelihood of the development
of distant metastases following surgery.
The surgical approach in SCLC is similar to that used in NSCLC: A lobectomy
or pneumonectomy should be followed by a thorough mediastinal
lymph node dissection. Tumor resection in SCLC should be limited to patients
who have no evidence of mediastinal or supraclavicular lymph node
metastases. Recent data suggest that patients with SCLC, presenting as a
solitary pulmonary nodule and proven pathologically to be stage I, have a
5-year survival rate of ~70% when treated with resection and adjuvant
chemotherapy.
TREATMENT OF DISEASE LIMITED TO THE THORAX
Approximately one-third of SCLC patients present with disease that is limited
to the thorax and can be encompassed within a tolerable radiation portal.
In early studies in which either radiation therapy or surgery alone was
used to treat such patients, median survival was only 3-4 months, and the 5-
year survival rate was in the range of 1%-2%. The reason for the failure of
these therapies was both rapid recurrence of intrathoracic tumor and development
of distant metastasis.
Chemotherapy
During the 1970s, it became apparent that SCLC was relatively sensitive to
chemotherapy. Various combination chemotherapy regimens were used to
treat limited SCLC. Although none of the regimens was clearly superior,
median survival was approximately 12 months, and the 2-year survival rate
was approximately 10%-15%.
It appears that maintenance chemotherapy adds little to survival in patients
with limited SCLC.
CHEMOTHERAPY PLUS THORACIC IRRADIATION
One of the major advances in treating SCLC in the past 15 years is the
recognition of the value of early and concurrent thoracic chemoradiation
therapy. This advance was clearly facilitated by the increase in therapeutic
index when PE (cisplatin [Platinol]/etoposide) chemotherapy is given with
thoracic irradiation, as opposed to older anthracycline or alkylator-based
regimens. Although the major impact from this approach is improved
locoregional control, there are also hints from randomized trials that early
control of disease in the chest can also reduce the risk of distant metastasis.
An intergroup trial directly compared once-daily with twice-daily fractionation
(45 Gy/25 fractions/5 weeks vs 45 Gy/30 fractions/3 weeks) given at the
beginning of concurrent chemoradiation therapy with PE. Initial analysis showed excellent overall results, with median
survival for all patients of 20 months
and a 40% survival rate to 2 years. With a
minimum follow-up of 5 years, survival was
significantly better in the twice-daily than in
the once-daily irradiation group (26% vs
16%). The only difference in toxicity was a
temporary increase in grade 3 esophagitis in
patients receiving twice-daily radiation
therapy.
Outcomes for patients with limited-stage
SCLC have improved significantly over the
past 20 years. In an analysis of phase III
trials during this time period, median survival
was 12 months in the control arm in 26
phase III studies initiated between 1972 and
1981, compared with 17 months in studies
between 1982 and 1992 (
P < .001). Five studies demonstrated a statistically
significant improvement in survival in the experimental arm compared with
the control arm. Interestingly, all five studies involved some aspect of thoracic
radiation therapy (three trials compared chemotherapy alone vs
chemoradiation therapy; one compared early with late radiation therapy;
and one compared daily vs twice-daily thoracic radiation therapy). Similarly,
data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database
demonstrate that the 5-year survival rate has more than doubled from
1973 to 1996 (5.2% vs 12.2%,
P = .0001).
Current recommendations Although important questions remain as to the
optimal radiation doses, volumes, and timing with regard to chemotherapy,
a reasonable present standard is to deliver thoracic irradiation concurrently
with PE chemotherapy (cisplatin [60 mg/m
2 IV on day 1] and
etoposide(Drug information on etoposide)
[120 mg/ m
2 IV on days 1-3]). An attempt is made to integrate thoracic irradiation
during cycle 1 or 2. Hyperfractionated accelerated fractionation should
be considered, given the results of the intergroup 0096 trial. The data extant
do not indicate that chemotherapy beyond four cycles has a favorable impact
on long-term outcome.
Irradiation can be incorporated sequentially to chemotherapy; however, this
approach appears to be inferior to early concurrent therapy and should be
reserved for use in those for whom concurrent approaches are predicted to
be excessively toxic.
Results of an intergroup trial indicate that radiation therapy strategies that
increase biologic dose can improve local control and survival. Further exploration
of accelerated fractionation or conventional doses > 45 Gy is warranted
and is currently being investigated in prospective trials.
Movsas et al reported the results of the first Patterns of Care Study (PCS) for
lung cancer in the United States. This study was conducted to determine the national patterns of radiotherapy practice in
patients treated for nonmetastatic lung cancer
in 1998-1999. As supported by clinical
trials, patients with limited-stage SCLC received
chemotherapy plus radiotherapy more
often than radiotherapy alone (92% vs 5%,
P < .0001). However, the median radiotherapy
dose was 50 Gy, 80% at 1.8-2.0 Gy
per fraction. Only 6% of patients received
hyperfractionated (twice-daily) radiotherapy.
A total of 22% received prophylactic cranial
irradiation (PCI), with a median dose of
30 Gy in 15 fractions. As key studies supporting
twice-daily radiotherapy in PCI and
NSCLC were published in 1999, the penetration
of these trials will be assessed in the
next PCS lung survey.
Interestingly, Choi et al reported long-term
survival data from their phase I trial assessing
chemotherapy with either standard daily
radiotherapy or accelerated twice-daily radiotherapy
as from the Cancer and Leukemia
Group B (CALGB) 8837 trial. They previously
reported that the maximum tolerated
dose was 45 Gy in 30 fractions for twice-daily radiotherapy and > 70 Gy
in 35 fractions for once-daily radiotherapy. The 5-year survival estimated
(from this phase I trial) for the twice-daily arm was 20%, vs 36% for the oncedaily
radiotherapy arm. They suggest a phase III randomized trial to compare
standard daily radiotherapy (to 70 Gy) vs twice-daily radiotherapy (to
45 Gy). Indeed, the long-term results of a phase III trial comparing oncedaily
irradiation (to 50.4 Gy in 28 fractions) vs twice-daily irradiation (to 48
Gy in 32 fractions via a split course) demonstrated similar outcomes in either
arm. The median and 5-year survival rates of patients in this study (21 months
and 20%, respectively) were similar to those reported by Turrisi et al.
Although surgical resection is not part of the standard therapy for SCLC, the
Japanese Clinical Oncology Lung Cancer Study Group reported the results
of a phase II trial of postoperative adjuvant
cisplatin(Drug information on cisplatin)/etoposide in patients
with completely resected stages I-IIIA SCLC. The 5-year survival rates (in a
cohort of 62 patients) for pathologic stages I, II, and IIIA SCLC were 69%,
38%, and 40%, respectively.