Term
What is a fine needle biopsy, bronchoscopy, and mediastinoscopy? |
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Definition
Fine needle biopsy - thin needle passed between ribs into mass in the lung with the aid of fluoroscope
Bronchoscopy - Lighted, flexi tube passed through mouth into bronchi, checks lung lining
Mediastinoscopy - General anesthesia used while lighted tube passed through cut in base of neck under breastbone --> checks lymph nodes |
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Term
What is a thoracentesis? What is a thoracoscopy? |
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Definition
Thoracentesis - Needle placed between ribs to drain fluid around lungs to see if cancer in pleural membrane or due to another cause
Thoracoscopy - Thin, lighted tube with camera to view space between lungs and chest wall --> looks for tumors on surface of lungs |
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Term
What are the three different kinds of lung cancer? How are they different? |
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Definition
NSCLC (non-small cell lung cancer --> most common, typically better prognosis, TNM stages 0-IV
SCLC --> Less common, worse prognosis, limited stage and extensive stage
Mesothelioma --> Least common, cancer in pleura of lungs, not IN lungs. Surgery is needed; Pemetrexed plus cisplatin in non-resectable, result of asbestos exposure |
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Term
Can other cancers metastasize to the lungs? |
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Definition
- YES!
- This is NOT lung cancer
- Treat according to primary cancer
- Some cancers that metastasize to the lungs: breast, pancreas, kidney, skin
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Term
What are the risk factors of lung cancer? |
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Definition
- First and foremost, smoking!
- Second-hand smoke
- Arsenic
- Benzene
- Radon
- Asbestos (mesothelioma)
- Radiation exposure
- Air pollution
- TB
- Family history
- Age > 65 |
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Term
What are the signs and symptoms of lung cancer? |
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Definition
- persistent cough
- hemoptosis
- chest pain
- recurring pneumonia or bronchitis
- weight loss and loss of appetite
- SOB
- Fever of unknown origin
- Headaches, change in vision or speech |
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Term
What kind of a patient work-up do we need to do in order to identify lung cancer? |
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Definition
nPatient history
nPhysical Exam
nCBC, chemistries
nCT
nMRI
nBone scan
nPET
nSputum cytology
nFine needle biopsy
nBronchoscopy
nMediastinoscopy
nThoracentesis
nThoracoscopy
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Term
What do stages I-IV represent for NSCLC? |
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Definition
I - Cancer confined to lung and not more than 3cm in diameter
II - Cancer is either: >3cm, OR invades nearby lymph nodes, OR invades other parts of pulmonary system but without lymph nodes
III - Cancer spread to more distant lymph nodes or to other organs
IV - Multiple spots in same lung OR cancer in both lungs OR distant metastases |
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Term
What do the "limited" and "extensive" stage represent in SCLC? |
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Definition
Limited stage - Cancer in 1 lung and lymph nodes on same side of chest.
Extensive stage - Cancer spread to second lung or to lymph nodes on other side of chest or to pleural space. |
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Term
When is drug therapy for lung cancer indicated? |
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Definition
- Earlier than in other diseases
- Neoadjuvant: w/ XRT for large but operable Stage III
- Adjuvant: Alone or w/ XRT depending on the setting
- Metastatic disease --> alone for palliation |
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Term
How would you treat advanced or metastatic lung cancer? |
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Definition
- Survival predicted by baseline stage, weight loss, performance status, gender
In good PS patients, platinum-based chemo improves:
- PFS by 4-6 months
- Median survival by 8-10 months
- 1-year survival by 30-40%
- 2-year survival by 10-15%
In regards to chemo:
- Does not help ECOG PS 3 or 4, regardless of age
- Platinum-based therapies preferred
- 2 drugs better than 3 except --> when third drug is Cetuximab/Bevacizumab and patient is treatment naive (ECOG PS 0 or 1) |
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Term
How would you go about giving a lung cancer patient an adjuvant regimen of chemo? What different about Chemo-XRT regimens? |
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Definition
- 4 cycles of cisplatin-based chemo is best --> Vinorelbine or Vinblastine or Etoposide
- If patient can't take cisplatin --> 4 cycles of carboplatin-paclitaxel
- Cisplatin + gemcitabine/docetaxel also acceptable
- Chemo-XRT: Same drugs but with different doses/schedules to be used with XRT --> Cisplatin, Etoposide, Vinblastine, Carbo-taxol |
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Term
What is the algorithm for treating advanced/metastatic NSCLC? First/second/third line? |
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Definition
First: Platinum-based (cis or carbo) +/- bevacizumab
Second: Pemetrexed, docetaxel, erlotinib preferred. Other platinum combos --> Vincas, gemcitabine, etoposide, irinotecan, docetaxel OK
Third: Erlotinib preferred, anything not used second line |
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Term
When would a NSCLC patient be a candidate for Bevacizumab? What would prevent them from receiving this medication? |
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Definition
- Not for squamous cell histology --> clinically significant hemoptosis
- PS 0 or 1, treatment naive
- Not for brain mets
- Not if h/o hemoptosis
- Not if on anti-coagulation or if clotting disorder |
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Term
What is the general algorithm for a SCLC patient on chemo? |
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Definition
First line:
qCis- or carbo-platin + etoposide – either stage
qCis- or carbo-platin + irinotecan – extensive stage
For Relapse:
qTopotecan*
qIrinotecan
qCyclophosphamide/doxorubicin/vincristine
qGemcitabine
qPaclitaxel or docetaxel
qOral etoposide
qVinorelbine
qifosfamide |
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Term
What are the key differences between Carboplatin and Cisplatin? Are there any differences in regards to treatment of lung cancer? |
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Definition
Carboplatin:
- Less N/V, but requires 5HT3 drug
- Less renal dysfunction
- More myelosuppression
- Dose based on AUC (in lung it's 5-7)
- Use CG to calculate CrCl
- Dose = (CrCl + 25)(target AUC)
Cisplatin:
- Reference drug for N/V
- Doses > 70mg/m2 need aprepitant
- More renal, less Myelo
- In adjunvant therapy, MORE effective than Carbo in NSCLC
- Both equally effective in metastatic disease |
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Term
What is the difference between Paclitaxel (Taxol) and Docetaxel (Taxotere)? |
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Definition
Paclitaxel:
- Different doses used
- Not water soluble
- Cremophor solvent causes infusion rxns
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Myelosuppression
Docetaxel:
- Not really associated with infusion rxns
- Edema, need Dexa 8mg BID before, day of, and after chemo
- Neutropenia
Adverse events shared by both:
- Mucositis
- Alopecia
- Adjust for bili, no renal adjustments
- Both 3A4 substrate |
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Term
At some points in lung cancer therapy, Vinca alkaloids may be used, what is significant regarding this class of drugs? |
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Definition
- NEVER PUT VINES IN THE SPINE!!!
- IV push or short infusion
- Alopecia, n/v, peripheral neuropathy, constipation, diarrhea (mild) are all adverse events
- P450 3A4 substrate
Vincristine:
- Dose-limiting neurotoxicity
- Constipation that can turn into paralytic ileus
- Orthostatic HTN
- Not myelosuppressive
- SIADH
- Adjust for bili
- No renal adjustments
Vinblastine:
- Dose-limiting myelosuppression
- Rare muscle aches
- Constipation or diarrhea
- Adjust for bili
- No renal adjustments |
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Term
What is significant regarding the drug Irinotecan (Camptosar)? |
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Definition
- Topoisomerase I inhibitor
- Various dosing schedules
- Acute or delayed diarrhea --> Use atropine for first 24 hours, loperamide > 24 hours
- Alopecia, N/V, myelosuppression, hepatic dysfunction, no renal adjustments, hold for bili > 2 |
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Term
What is significant regarding Etoposide (aka VP-16/VePesid)? |
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Definition
- Mitotic inhibitor
- 50% bioavailable (PO needs 2x the dose of IV)
- Dose-limiting myelosuppression
- Alopecia, N/V, anorexia with PO, high dose-limiting mucositis, asthenia/malaise, secondary leukemias, SJS, epidermal necrolysis
- Orthostatic HTN
- Adjusted for renal and hepatic dysfunction |
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Term
What is significant regarding Pemetrexed (Alimta)? |
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Definition
- Single agent, 2nd line for NSCLC
- With cisplatin, 1st line for non-resectable mesothelioma
Supportive Care:
- Need 1000mg folic acid qd 1-2 weeks prior
- Vitamin B12 1000mcg IM 1-2 weeks prior q 3 cycles
- Dexamethasone 4mg po BID day before, of, and after chemo to prevent rash
- Rash, myelosuppression, fever/infection, stomatitis/pharyngitis
- Hold for CrCl <45 of Bili > 2 |
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Term
What kind of therapy is Geftinib (Iressa)? Is this therapy beneficial to lung cancer patients? |
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Definition
- Targed therapy
- Small molecular weight EGFR-TKI inhibitor
- Class effects include rash/diarrhea
- Other meds in this class include Erlotinib (Tarceva) and Bevacizumab (Avastin; targets VEGF)
Study summary:
Oral EGFR-TKI approved in May 2003 as 3rd line for NSCLC based on 10% RR…..
IMPACT 1 and IMPACT 2 demonstrated no survival advantage over standard chemotherapy
June 2005: FDA changes indication:
“…monotherapy for the continued treatment of patients with [NSCLC]…who are benefiting or have benefited from IRESSA”
But being investigated in other diseases |
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Term
What is significant regarding the drug Erlotinib (Tarceva)? |
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Definition
- Tyrosine kinase inhibitor of EGFR
- NSCLC: 150mg po daily, 100mg if pancreatic cancer
- Dose-limiting diarrhea and acneiform rash
- Rash may correlate with response
- 3A4 sub, could affect INR
- Smoking increases clearance by 24%
- No renal/hepatic adjustments |
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