The influence of tumor staging on life expectancy with the use of chemoradiotherapy in small cell lung cancer treatment

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Abstract

Background. The treatment of small cell lung cancer is the subject of intensive research in the field of chemotherapy of malignant tumors. The use of radiation treatment and chemotherapy leads to 80–100% of the objective effect, and 50–70% of patients achieve complete remission, which is the main goal of combined therapy, although this treatment cannot help to prevent the growth of the tumor.

Aim. The aim of the study was to examine the relationship between the stage of primary tumor and the life expectancy of patients with small cell lung cancer on receiving complex chemoradiotherapy.

Methods. The study included 483 patients with small cell lung cancer who received chemoradiotherapy treatment between 1995 and 2015. Out of 483 patients, 439 (90.9%) were men and 44 (9.1%) were women. Total number of patients in the age group of 65–69 were 212 (43.8%). According to the tumor staging, they were distributed as follows: IA [T1N0M0] – 23 (4.1%) patients; IB [T2N0M0] – 86 (15.3%) patients; IIA [T1N1M0] – 33 (5.9%) patients; IIB [T2N1M– 88 (15.7%), T3N0M– 78 (14.0%)] – 166 (29.7%) patients; IIIA [T3N1M– 58 (10.4%), T1N2M– 37 (6.6%), T2N2M– 34 (6.1%), T3N2M– 46 (8.2%)] – 175 (31.3%) patients. The total of 31.3% of patients had stage IIIA. Metastases to regional lymph nodes N1 were detected in 155 (32.1%) patients, N2 in 101 (21%) patients, and N3 in 36 (7.5%) patients.

Results. The life expectancy of patients receiving complex conservative treatment primarily depends on the size of the primary tumor in the lung and secondarily on the presence of regional metastases. The average life expectancy for T1N0 is 30.2 months, which is 18 months more compared with T2N0 and 22.7 months more than T3N0, but these differences begin to decrease with the appearance of metastases in regional lymph nodes: T1N1 average life expectancy is 22.4 months, which is 14.9 months more than T2N1 and 20 months more than T3N1. The lowest average life expectancy is in patients with N2, so with T1 it was 11.4 months, which is 9 months more than with T2 and 9.8 months more than with T3; this means that the presence of mediastinal metastases in patients with T2 and T3 tumors have a negative predictive effect of the average life expectancy.

Conclusions. According to the results obtained, life expectancy in patients with T1–3N0–2M0 tumor staging receiving chemoradiotherapy depends primarily on the size of the primary lung tumor and secondarily on the regional lymph node metastases. Lung cancer treatment is much more effective when the disease is in its earlier stages, that is, T1N0–1.

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About the authors

Sergey D. Fokeev

Altai State Medical University

Author for correspondence.
Email: fokeev.sergey@yandex.ru

Senior Researcher, Department of Radiosurgery, MD, PhD, DSc, Professor of the Department of faculty surgery named after Prof. I. I. Neymark and hospital surgery with a course of additional professional education in surgery, docent, Altai state medical University

Russian Federation, Barnaul

A. F. Lazarev

Altai State Medical University

Email: fokeev.sergey@yandex.ru
Russian Federation, Barnaul

Е. А. Kazantseva

Altai State Medical University

Email: fokeev.sergey@yandex.ru
Russian Federation, Barnaul

S. U. Kapitulin

Altai State Medical University

Email: fokeev.sergey@yandex.ru
Russian Federation, Barnaul

Y. G. Belokrylova

Altai State Medical University

Email: fokeev.sergey@yandex.ru
Russian Federation, Barnaul

References

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  4. Dgebuadze E.N. Evolving new modes of chemoradiation treatment for localized small cell lung cancer. Abstract 2007. (in Russian)
  5. Gulidov I.A., Zolotkov A.G., Mardynsky I.N., etc. Comparison of conventional radiation therapy and accelerated hyperfractionation in chemoradiotherapy for small cell lung cancer. Sibirskiy onkologicheskiy zhurnal. 2013;1(55):12-5. (in Russian)
  6. Leigh N.B. Small-cell lung cancer. In: N.B. Leigh, F.A. Shepherd, F. Pearson Thoracic and Esophageal Surgery. Philadel. Churchill Livingstone. 2008:825-40.
  7. Ramazanova M.S., Kislichko A.G. Small cell lung cancer: the effectiveness of different treatment regimens, long-term results and prognosis. Kazanskiy meditsinskiy zhurnal. 2012;93(4):623-7. (in Russian)

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