What are the New Advancements in the Treatment of Lung Cancer?

by Dr Amit Jotwani
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According to Globocan 2020, lung cancer is the second most common cancer by incidence, affecting 2.2 million people (11.4 %). 

It is the most common cause of cancer related deaths, affecting 1.7 million worldwide (18%). In India, it has an incidence of 72,510 and causes deaths of 66,279 every year. 

Lung cancers can be treated with surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy or a combination of these treatments. 

The treatment for lung cancer has been rapidly changing over the past few years, mainly due to advancements in molecular studies and their increased availability. 

Although the staging and pathological features of lung cancer have not changed dramatically, molecular studies and next generation sequencing have opened the doors of precision medicine to a greater number of patients, making customised treatment plans a reality. 

What was a dream even a few years back has become a reality even in the remotest of areas, and better interaction between various medical disciplines has only made it better.

advanced cancer treatment

Surgery for lung cancer

Surgery is the initial treatment modality in early stage lung cancers. 

Long back in 1933, Graham performed the first complete pneumonectomy (removal of a lung) for treatment of lung cancer. Thereafter, it remained the gold standard for many years. 

In the 1960s, lobectomy (removal of a lobe in lung) became widely accepted as a surgery for lung cancer, and was found to be equivalent to pneumonectomy with fewer complications.

Minimally invasive video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) came into the surgical management picture in the early 1990s. It has continued to evolve significantly over the last 25 years.  

VATS is a type of minimally invasive surgery, performed with a thoracoscope (tiny camera) using small incisions and special instruments. 

During surgery, three small incisions are made, as compared with one long 6- to 8-inch chest incision that is used during open thoracic surgery. Surgical instruments and the thoracoscope are inserted through these small incisions. 

The thoracoscope transmits images of the inside of your chest onto a computer monitor, guiding the surgeon in performing the procedure.

As compared with open surgery, patients who undergo minimally invasive surgery experience decreased postoperative pain, shorter hospital stay, faster recovery and reduced risk of infection and bleeding. 

VATS lobectomy

Lobectomy is the most common surgery performed to treat lung cancer. Lobectomy has been traditionally performed by open surgery. Lobectomy can be performed using a minimally invasive approach. 

The patient experiences a more rapid recovery with less pain and a shorter hospital stay (usually 3 days) with VATS lobectomy as compared with traditional open surgery.

Radiation treatment  for lung cancer

Radiation therapy uses high dose radiation that can destroy rapidly dividing cancer cells. The main aim of radiation therapy is to deliver a sufficient dose to the lung tumor while minimizing the dose to surrounding normal organs. 

There have been technological advancements that allow high precision and accuracy, resulting in better targeting of lung tumours and sparing of surrounding normal tissues (like remaining lung, heart, spinal cord and esophagus), thereby reducing the side effects. 

lung cancer treatment latest

The development of advanced radiation technologies, including intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT), Image guided radiation therapy (IGRT),  stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) and proton beam therapy(PBT), has resulted in increasingly conformal radiation treatments.

Radiation treatment can be used as curative or palliative treatment across all stages of disease.

  • as primary treatment
  • after surgery to eliminate any cancer cells that remain in the treated area
  • to treat lung cancer that has spread to the brain or other areas of the body or to palliate symptoms.

Discussed below are the latest techniques in radiation treatment for lung cancer.

IMRT

This technology targets the tumor while sparing the healthy tissue that surrounds it and allowing it to administer a higher dose of radiation to a lung tumor and increasing your chance for cure.

A specialized form of IMRT, called IGRT involves the use of scans to verify the position of the patient and the location of the tumor prior to and during the delivery of the treatment. 

IGRT may involve a variety of 2-D, 3-D and 4-D imaging techniques to position your body and aim the radiation so that your treatment is carefully focused on the tumor in order to minimize harm to healthy cells and organs nearby.

Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) 

It’s also known as stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR). This is a type of high precision radiation therapy technique where focused beams of high dose radiation are given in usually 1 to 5 sittings.  

It is most often used to treat early-stage lung cancers, especially when surgery is not an option due to a person’s health or in people who refuse surgery.  

Advantages of SBRT over conventional radiotherapy is that a greater combined dose of radiation is given over the course of far fewer treatment sessions when compared to conventional methods  of relatively small doses over the course of several weeks.

Proton beam therapy 

This is an advanced form of radiation therapy, which has the potential to improve the clinical outcomes of lung cancer patients with decreased toxicity, when compared with photon(X-ray) radiation therapy.

 By using proton therapy for lung cancer treatment,it is feasible to deliver highly effective and very precise doses of protons to the exact location of the lung cancer. 

Proton therapy for lung cancer is available for two main groups:

  • Patients with lung cancer or tumors of the lung that have not spread outside of the chest.
  • Patients with cancer recurrence in the chest after previous treatment whose cancer has not spread outside of the chest

Systemic treatment for lung cancer

Genomic analysis and targeted therapy for specific gene mutations has resulted in better treatment responses than standard chemotherapy for certain subtypes of lung cancer.

Over-expression of programmed cell death ligand 1 in lung cancer can influence decisions related to use of immunotherapy with/ without chemotherapy.

The fact that an elaborate diagnosis is needed for treatment decisions makes it important for diagnostic sampling to be adequate. 

While fine needle aspiration cytology dominated diagnostic sampling earlier, the need for an adequate biopsy has been accepted and is widely being practised even in peripheral centres.

While traditionally these diagnostic tests are done on solid tumour tissues, blood based tests are also available in cases where a biopsy is not feasible or does not provide adequate tissue for testing. These ‘liquid biopsies’ are based on the principle that cell-free ct DNA and/or circulating tumour cells (CTCs) are present in blood of patients with lung cancer.

Targeted therapy

lung cancer advanced treatments

  • EGFR mutation – Mutations in epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase are seen in many NSCLC adenocarcinomas and occur commonly in nonsmokers and Asian natives. 

Various tyrosine kinase agents available for EGFR-positive metastatic NSCLC are Osimertinib, Gefitinib, Afatinib and Erlotinib. 

  • ALK rearrangements – Re-arrangements involving the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) tyrosine kinase are seen in 4% NSCLC adenocarcinomas, and more frequently in younger non-smokers. 

Advanced cancers bearing these re-arrangements can be targeted with ALK TKIs (Crizotinib, Ceritinib, Alectinib, Brigatinib, Lorlatinib), improving survival.

  • ROS1 rearrangements – c-ROS oncogene 1 (ROS1) can act as a driver oncogene in certain cases through a genetic translocation, and can be targeted by agents like Crizotinib, Entrectinib and Lorlatinib.
  • MET abnormalities – Capmatinib is approved for adults with a MET exon-14-skipping mutation. Work on Tepotinib is ongoing and it seems to be another promising agent in such settings.
  • RET re-arrangements – The rearranged during transfection gene (RET) can have various re-arrangements with various fusion partners and RET inhibitors like Selpercatinib and Pralsetinib are approved for this indication. 

Cabozantinib, Vandetanib, Alectinib and Sunitinib may have potential roles in such scenarios.

  • BRAF mutation – Activating BRAF mutations have been reported in NSCLCs and are associated with a better prognosis and respond better to immunotherapy. 

Combinations of Dabrafenib and Trametinib are associated with good response rates in BRAF V600E mutations.

  • NTRK fusion – Larotrectinib and Entrectinib have been approved for use in advanced NSCLC with a neurotrophic receptor tyrosine kinase (NTRK) gene fusion, lack any other known acquired mutation or have no satisfactory alternatives.
  • KRAS G12C mutation – Sororasib has been approved for use in locally advanced or metastatic NSCLC with KRAS G12C mutation. Adagrasib is another drug in the same class and is being tested in clinical trials.

Immunotherapy

Immunotherapy has revolutionised  cancer treatment and has shown promising results in a variety of scenarios. PDL-1 testing is routinely done along with driver mutations in advanced lung cancers.

For those without any driver mutations and either unknown PDL1 expression or <50% of tumour cells staining for PDL-1, platinum based chemotherapy with Pembrolizumab is recommended.

For those without any driver mutations and >50% staining for PDL1, checkpoint inhibitor (Pembrolizumab, Atezolizumab, Cemiplimab), with or without chemotherapy are available options; with Pembrolizumab monotherapy fast becoming a common and feasible option in such cases, as it has an approved every-six-week schedule and longer follow-up data. Nivolumab and Ipilimumab are reasonable alternatives.

Use of newer diagnostic modalities and a better understanding of targetable mutations has opened up therapeutic options, which are becoming accessible to wider groups of patients. 

Although a lot of these are being used in clinical trial settings in various parts of the world and many are logistically out of reach at present for a majority of our patients, wider use may result in greater availability and feasibility in the future.

Watch Dr Neelesh Reddy explain the treatment for lung cancer here. 

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