Lung Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

Notes on subtypes of lung cancers

A

Squamous cell carcinoma (20%)

  • Strongly associated with tobacco smoking
  • Decreasing in frequency
  • More common in men
  • Tend to arise centrally from segmental or subsegmental bronchi
  • TP53 mutations, CDKN2A inactivation loss of RB tumour suppressor

Small Cell Carcinoma (14%)

  • Strongest association with smoking - only 1% occur in non smokers
  • May arise in major bronchi or periphery of lung
  • No known preinvasive phase
  • Most aggressive
  • Most commonly associated with ectopic hormone production
  • Metastasies outside the thorax late
  • Genetics
    • Loss of function abberation TP53 (75-90%)
    • Loss of RB (nearly 100%)
    • Amplification of MYC common
    • High levels of BCLS (anti-apoptotic protein) on immunohistochemistry

Adenocarcinoma (38%)

  • Most frequent, more common in women
  • Usually more peripherally located, tend to be smaller
  • Oncogenic gain of function mutations involving growth factor receptor signalling pathways - multiple genes encoding receptor tyrosine kinases
    • EGFR, ALK, ROS, MET and RET
    • Tumours without TK gene mutations often have mutations in the KRAS gene(downstream of receptor tyrosine kinases)
    • Activating KRAS mutations - worse prognosis

Large Cell Carcinoma

  • Undifferentiated, malignant
  • Diagnosis of exclusion (lacks markers of other cancers)
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2
Q

Distant spread of lung cancers:

A
  • Any type can extend onto pleural surface and within the pleural cavity or pericardium
  • Spread to bronchi, trachea, mediastinal nodes
  • Distant spread - lymphatic and haematogenous
    • Often spread early (exception squamous cell)
    • Adrenal involved in 50% - also liver (30-50%), brain (20%), bone (20%)
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3
Q

Paraneoplastic syndromes associated with lung cancer

A
  • Lung cancer associated with several neoplastic syndromes
    • ADH - hyponatraemia
    • Adrenocorticotropic hormone - Cushing’s syndrome
    • Parathormone, parathyroid hormone-related peptide, prostaglandin E - hypercalcaemia
    • Calicitonin - hypocalcaemia
    • Gonoadotropins - gynaecomastia
    • Serotonin, bradykinin - carcinoid syndrome
  • ADH, ACTH predominantly small cell
  • Hypercalcaemia - squamous cell
  • Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome
    • Muscle weakness caused by auto-antibodies directed at the neuronal calcium channel
  • Sensory peripheral neuropathy
  • Dermatologic - acanthosis nigricans
  • Haematologic - leukemoid reactions, hypercoaguable such as Trousseau - DVT and thromboembolism
  • HPOA
  • Horner’s syndrome
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4
Q

Notes on carcinoid lung tumours

A
  • 1-5% lung tumours
  • Typically younger than 40, males and females equal
  • 20-40% non smokers
  • Characteristics
    • Symptoms typical of intraluminal bronchial growth
    • Secretory activity - Carcinoid syndrome - occurs in 10% bronchial carcinoids
      • Intermittent attacks of flushing, diarrhoea, cyanosis
  • Most bronchial carcinoids do not have secretory activity and do not metastasise to distant sites - follow a relatively benign course for long periods and generally amenable to resection
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5
Q

Tumours of the anterior, posterior and middle mediastinum:

A
  • Anterior mediastinum
    • Thymoma
    • Teratoma
    • Lymphoma
    • Thyroid lesions
    • Parathyroid tumours
    • Metastatic carcinoma
  • Posterior mediastinum
    • Neurogenic tumours
    • Lymphoma
    • Metastatic tumour (most from lung)
    • Bronchogenic cyst
    • Gastroenetric hernia
  • Middle mediastinum
    • Bronchogenic cyst
    • Pericardial cyst
    • Lymphoma
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6
Q

Epidemiology, risk factors for lung cancer

A
  • Leading cause of cancer related deaths worldwide
  • Majority present with advanced disease
    • 42% Stage 4 - 5ys 3yrs
  • 20-30 year time lag between smoking prevalence and lung cancer death
    • While declining in men - still rising in women due to changes in smoking patterns over the decades
    • Smoking cessation after a diagnosis can improve prognosis regardless of cancer stage

Risk factors

  • Tobacco smoking (cigar and pipe smoking less so) - risk will always remain in ex smokers
    • Most potent carcinogens → polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and aromatic amines
  • Industrial → asbestosis, arsenic, chromium, uranium, nickel, vinyl, chloride, mustard gas, silica
  • High dose ionising radiation
  • Increasing incidence with age
  • Emphysema, chronic asthma, COPD, ILD
  • TB, HIV
  • Family history
  • Lung cancer prevalence in never-smokers higher in Asian countries ?inhalation of cooking oil vapour and domestic coal use
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7
Q

Presentation of lung cancer

A
  • Almost always symptomatic at diagnosis
  • Primary tumour - cough, haemoptysis
  • Constitutional - weight loss, malaise
  • Paraneoplastic syndrome - hypercalcaemia, SIADH, VTE, HPOA
  • Intrathoracic spread - e.g. pleural effusion, chest wall invasion, Horner syndrome, SVC obstruction
  • Distant metastases - bone, headache, cord compression, Addisson’s
  • Increasing incidental detection of lung nodules on CT scans for other reasons
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8
Q

Diagnostic work-up for lung cancer

A
  • CT CAP (including neck)
    • 75% sensitivity, 66% specificity for mediastinal lymph nodes
  • PET if potential for radial treatment (high sensitivity for distant metastases)
    • 91% sensitivity, 86% specificity for mediastinal LNs
  • Tissue evaluation
    • Bronchoscopy +/- endobronchial ultrasound
    • CT guided lung biopsy
    • Biopsy of mets
    • Less common - mediastinscopy, sputum cytology
    • Liquid biopsy (e.g. blood urine)
      • May benefit those who are medically unfit for invasive procedures
      • Tissue diagnosis still considered gold standard
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9
Q

Notes on lung cancer staging

A
  • Lymph node staging
    • 1 → ipsilateral peribronchial and/or hilar lymph nodes
    • 2 → ipsilateral mediastinal and/or subcarinal lymph nodes
    • 3 → contralateral mediastinum and hilar nodes, I/L or C/L scalene or supraclavicular lymph nodes
    • Lymph node involvement changes survival significantly
  • Pleural effusion = metastatic (IV)
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10
Q

Management of early stage non-small cell lung cancer

A
  • 20% patients
  • Surgical resection with curative intent recommended if medically fit and early stage - Stage I, II +/- Stage IIIa if N2 lymph nodes identified during procedure) - lobectomy with mediastinal lymph node dissection standard
    • Thoracotomy
    • VATs - less pain, fewer hospital complications and shorter hospital stays
  • Adjuvant platinum based chemotherapy recommended for stages II-IIIA - absolute decreased risk of death of 5% at 5 years - substantial toxicities
  • Molecularly targeted therapies - not demonstrated an overall survival benefit in early-stage patients

Non-surgical candidates:

  • Stage I - stereotactic (ablative) body radiotherapy for Stage I-IIA disease
    • Better survival than conventional radiotherapy
  • Other options conventional fractionated radiotherapy
  • Stage II - radiotherapy with curative intent with or without concomitant chemotherapy
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11
Q

Management of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer:

A
  • 30% patients - T3-T4, N2-N3
  • Most non-surgical candidates
  • Concurrent chemo-radiotherapy followed by immunotherapy
    • Cisplatin-etoposide or cisplatin-vinerelbine
    • Durvalumab improves PFS after CRT (PDL-1 inhibitor) regardless of PDL-1 status
  • TKIs targeting EGFR, ALK, ROS1
  • Unclear whether patients with oncogene driven lung cancer respond to immunotherapy
  • If no targetable alterations - immunotherapy may be given after platinum based chemo-radiation
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12
Q

Management of metastatic non-small cell lung cancer

A
  • Median survival 4-5 months with best supportive care
  • TKIs
  • Chemo-immunotherapy
  • Immunotherapy - integral part as 1st/2nd line in patients without target mutations
  • Chemotherapy followed by immunotherapy
  • Best supportive care
  • Palliative radiotherapy (painful bone mets, cerebral mets)
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13
Q

Examples of molecularly targeted therapies in lung cancer:

A
  • EGFR mutations - 10-30% NSCL tumours - up to 60% in Asians
    • First generation TKIs - gefitinib, erlotinib
    • Second generation - afatinib, osimertinib
  • ALK gene rearrangements - 5% NSCLC
    • First generation - crizotinib
    • Second generation - certinib, alectinib, lorlatinib, brigatinib
  • ROS1 rearrangements - 1-2% NSCLS
    • Crizotinib, entrectinib
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14
Q

Notes on immunotherapy in lung cancer

A
  • Immune checkpoints keep immune responses from being too strong and enable self-tolerance
    • PD-L1 can be upregulated on tumour cells as a means of immune escape by providing a negative immune regulatory signal
    • When the checkpoint and ligand proteins bind together then send off a signal to the T cells preventing them from killing cancer cells
    • Immune checkpoint inhibitors are monoclonal antibodies that target PD L1 and PD 1
    • When checkpoints are blocked - T cells can kill cancer cells better
  • PD 1
    • Pembrolizumab - initial treatment of NSCLC
    • Nivolumab
  • PDL1
    • Atezolizumab
    • Durvalumab
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15
Q

Notes on management of small cell lung cancer

A
  • Exceptionally high proliferative rate, early mets, poor prognosis
  • One third has earlier stage disease - potentially curable with multimodality therapy
  • CT screening does not detect at earlier stages - does not effect survival
  • Localised disease - chemoradiotherapy and prophylactic cranial irradiation reduces brain metastases
  • Metastatic - chemotherapy +/- immunotherapy, plus consolidation chest radiotherapy for patient who respond to chemotherapy
  • Initially very responvie to cytotoxic therapies
    • Standard therapy is cisplatin-etoposide (has not changed in past three decades)
  • Subset derive durable benefit from immunotherapy - majority do not
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16
Q

Good prognostic indicators in lung cancer

A
  • Stage of disease
  • Good performance status (most cancers)
  • Lack of substantial weight loss
  • Female sex
17
Q

Management options for Stage IV NSCLCA EGFR mutant

A
  • 40% Asian patients,
  • 1st generation TKI erictinib improves PFS compared with chemotherapy alone in EGFR positive patient - other alternatives → gefitinib, afatinib
    • Side effects → Acneiform rash (correlates with response to therapy) and can be Rx with doxycyline and topical steroids
  • 3rd generation → Osemertinib
    • PO, irresversible EGFR TKI that selectvely inhibits both EGFR-TKI sensitising and EGFR T790M resistant mutations (T790 mutation is the most common mechanism of resistance)
    • Excellent CNS penetration, less skin toxicity
    • Approved as first line (improved PFS) and 2nd line with T90M
18
Q

Notes on targeted therapies for ALK gene rearrangements in metastatic NSCLC

A
  • Novel receptor TK → chromosomal translocation A/W 60% large-cell lymphomas
    • NSCLC A/W novel EML4-ALK fusion oncogene (inversion on Ch2 fuses EML4 gene with ALK gene)
  • 2-7% NSCLC - frequently Asian
  • E.g. Alectenib, crizotinib, loratinib, brigatinib
  • Alectinib → PFS longer compared to crizotinib, now standard of care. Also less toxic, rapid response, better CNS penetration
  • Class side effects (generally well tolerated) → visual changes, neutropaenia, altered bowel habir, pulmonary toxicity, fluid retention, hepatotoxicity, bradycardia/QT prolongation, cytochrome P450 interactions
19
Q

Notes on targeted therapies for ROS-1 gene rearrangements in metastatic NSCLC

A
  • 1% NSCLC
  • Crizotinib (also targets ALK and MET kinase)
  • Marked anti-tumour activity in patients with advanced ROS-1 rearranged NSCLC
20
Q

Notes on mesothelioma treatment options

A
  • Common pleural malignancy directly related to asbestos exposure
    • Epithelioid more common, sarcomatoid worse survival
  • Role of surgery and radiotherapy limited
  • Immunotherapy first line approved
    • Nivolumab plus ipilimumab vs chemotherapy improved overall survival - benefit in epithelioid
  • Palliative intent chemo (cisplatin and pemetrexed) alternative
  • Median survival 12 months