Chemoradiotherapy of locally advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer: state of the art and perspectives

PURPOSE OF REVIEWThe treatment of locally advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is becoming a significant challenge because of a growing proportion of patients with unresectable or potentially eligible for surgery after a multimodality treatment, stage II to III disease. Despite a multimodality...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current opinion in oncology 2016-03, Vol.28 (2), p.104-109
Hauptverfasser: Antoni, Delphine, Mornex, Françoise
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:PURPOSE OF REVIEWThe treatment of locally advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is becoming a significant challenge because of a growing proportion of patients with unresectable or potentially eligible for surgery after a multimodality treatment, stage II to III disease. Despite a multimodality approach consisting in concurrent chemoradiotherapy, the prognosis remains poor. RECENT FINDINGSDifferent strategies, including induction and consolidation chemotherapy, chemotherapy regimens, fractionation and radiation doses have been evaluated in phase II and III trials, as well as new therapeutic approaches such as immunotherapy. For patients with resectable stage III disease the optimal strategy remains unclear. The American Society for Radiation and Clinical Oncology and the European Society for Medical Oncology published recent guidelines in 2015. SUMMARYConcurrent chemoradiotherapy improves overall survival compared with sequential chemotherapy followed by radiation. Adding induction or consolidation chemotherapy to chemoradiotherapy does not appear to improve the outcome. Chemotherapy based on cisplatin combined with radiation is recommended in stage III NSCLC. The standard dose and fractionation of radiotherapy are 60 Gy, one daily fraction of 2 Gy over 6 weeks. Targeted therapies and immunotherapy may improve the management of locally advanced NSCLC in the future.
ISSN:1040-8746
1531-703X
DOI:10.1097/CCO.0000000000000265