Title: Lung Neoplasms
1Lung Neoplasms
2Epidemiology
- Decreasing incidence in men, stable incidence in
women - Men 83.5 in 100,000
- Women 49.2 in 100,000
- Decline likely due to public health initiatives
to stop smoking - Death rates decrease to that of nonsmokers 10yrs
after cessation
3Tumor Biology
- Many mechanisms
- Chromosomal loss of heterzygosity or allelic gain
- K-ras, myc, p53 mutations
- Inactivation of tumor suppressor p16INK4a (p16)
- EGF receptor mutations possibly important to
response to chemotherapy
4Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)
- Evaluate for distant mets
- Brain, contralateral lung, supraclavicular nodes,
bone, liver, adrenals - Labs CBC, BMP, Ca, alk phos, LDH
- CT or PET
- CT chest/upper abd to evaluate tumor lymph node
status - Mediastinoscopy gold standard fro tissue
diagnosis of mediastinal lymphadenopathy
5TNM Staging Non Small Cell Lung Cancer
- T1 lt3cm, surround by lung or visceral pleura, no
invasion of main bronchus - T2 gt3cm, involves main bronchus but gt2cm distal
to carina invades visercal pleura atelectasis
or obstructive pneumonitis that extends to hilar
region but does not involve entire lung - T3 Any size that directly invades any of these
chest wall, diaphragm, mediastinal pleura,
parietal pericardium tumor in main bronchus lt2cm
from carina but no involvement of carina
atelectasis or obstructive pneumonitis of entire
lung - T4 Any size that involves any of these
mediastinum, heart, great vessels, trachea,
esophagus, vertebral body, carina malignant
pleural or pericardial effusion satellite tumor
nodule with ipsilateral primary tumor lobe
6TNM Staging
- N0 No regional lymph node mets
- N1 Mets to ipsilateral peribronchial and/or
ipsilateral hilar lyph nodes and involvement in
intrapulmonary nodes by direct extension of
primary tumor - N2 Mets to ipsilateral mediastinal and/or
subcarinal lymph nodes - N3 Mets to contralateral mediastinal,
contralateral hilar, ipsilateral or contralateral
scalene, or suprclavicular lymph nodes - M0 No distant mets
- M1 Distant mets present (including metastatic
tumor nodule in ipsilateral non-primary tumor
lobe of the lung)
7TNM Staging
- Grouping TNM staging
- Stage 0 Tis N0 M0
- Stage IA T1 N0 M0
- Stage IB T2 N0 M0
- Stage IIA T1 N1 M0
- Stage IIB T2 N1 M0
- T3 N0 M0
- Stage IIIA T1 N2 M0
- T2 N2 M0
- T3 N1 M0
- T3 N2 M0
- Stage IIIB Any T N3 M0
- T4 Any N M0
- Stage IV Any T Any N M1
8(No Transcript)
9- N2 nodes
- 1-4
- Regional nodes
- 5-9
- N1 nodes
- 10-14
10Risk Assessment
- Comorbidities might prohibit surgical resection
- Age alone is not a contraindication to surgery
- Preop cardiovascular risk assessment is needed
- Preop spirometry, FEV1, DLCO, ABG, quantitative
perfusion scanning, formal or informal exercise
testing
11Treatment of NSCLC
- Stages I/II definitive staging pulmonary
resection with negative margins - Enbloc resection is adjacent structures are
involved - Peripheral tumors can be taken with non-anatomic
wedge resection higher risk for locoregional
recurrence (25-50) - Central tumors should be treated with sleeve
lobectomy rather than pneumonectomy when possible
- Nodal status should be confirmed systematic
sampling vs nodal dissection
12Survival Rates of NSCLC
- 5-Yr Survival
- Stage I 60-70
- Stage II 40-50
- Stage IIIA 15-30
- Staging
- Histology needs to be further defined
- Squamous has better survival than non-squamous
cancer - Does not seem to influence survival in late stage
tumors
13Patterns of Recurrence
- Predominant sites of relapse for all stages after
resection are distant mets - For all stages, brain is single most common site
of relapse - Other common metastatic sites
- Bone
- Ipsilateral or contralateral lung
- Liver
- Adrenal glands
- 60 recurrences in 1st 2yrs after resection
- Virtually of recurrences related to primary tumor
occur within 5yrs of resection - Risk of new second cancer 2-3 per year
- New, non-pulmonary cancer breast, colon,
prostate
14Treatment of Stage III Disease
- Is locoregionally advanced disease
- Stage IIIB considered unresectable
- T4 or N3 disease has no role for resection
- Small series have shown resection with invasion
of SVC, left atrium, or aorta after induction
chemo to downsize has survival benefit - Stage IIIA treatment is controversial complex
15Treatment of Stage IIIA
- Stage IIIA
- T1 N2 M0
- T2 N2 M0
- T3 N1 M0
- T3 N2 M0
- 5yr survival for N2 disease is 0-40, usually
20-30 - Varies with mediastinal nodal involvement, size
of primary tumor, ability to achieve complete
resection - Evidence suggests survival benefit for pts
receiving preop chemo
16Stage IIIA Neoadjuvant Therapy
- Optimal treatment not yet fully defined
- Improved resectability survival with induction
chemo vs resection or radiation alone - Higher doses of radiation (gt5500 cGy) are
associated with postoperative ARDS and bronchial
stump leak
17Superior Sulcus Tumors
- Pancoast tumors
- Previously thought to be uniformly fatal
- Frequently involve brachial plexus, subclavian
vessels, spine - Usually T3 or T4 (Stage IIIA or IIIIB)
- Patients without N2 disease should have induction
chemoradiation followed by resection
18Neuroendocrine Tumors
- Carcinoid
- Atypical carcinoid
- Small cell
- Large cell
19Typical Atypical Carcinoid Tumors
- Low-grade malignant potential
- About 2 of lung cancers
- From neuroendocrine stem cells of bronchial
epithelium - Atypical carcinoids
- Increased mitotic activity
- Increased nuclear pleomorphism
- Areas of disorganization of architecture tumor
necrosis
20Carcinoid Tumors
- Presentation
- Hemoptysis
- Dyspnea
- Recurrent/persistent pneumonitis
- Diagnosis
- Bronchoscopy
- CXR
- Carcinoid syndrome only about 2, usually in
pts with liver mets - Common sites of mets lung, bone, liver,
adrenals, brain
21Carcinoid Tumors
- Treatment is surgical resection
- Even in presence of nodal involvement
- Should include mediastinal lymph node sampling or
dissection - Lobectomy needed in 50
- Endoscopic resection is associated with local
recurrence should only be palliative - Long term surival gt90 after resection in typical
carcinoid, 5yr survival after resection in
atypical carcinoid 60 - Recurrence more frequent in tumors gt3cm with
lymph node mets
22Large Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma
- Microscopoicly similar to neuroendocrine tumors
- Tumors are large, have high mitotic rate,
frequently have necrosis - High-grade tumors
- Related to smoking
- Survival w/resection 5yr 267, 10yr 9
- Management similar to NSCLC
23Small Cell Lung Cancer
- Most aggressive clinical course
- Often widely disseminated at diagnosis
- Responsive to chemotherapy
- Limited disease confined to one hemithorax and
regional lymph nodes, ipsilateral pleural
effusion (positive or negative cytology) - Distant mets bone, liver, bone marrow, CNS
- lt10 SCLC is referred for surgical evaluation
24Small Cell Lung Cancer
- Response to chemoradiation
- Limited disease 85-90
- Extensive disease 75-85
- Chemo cisplatin, etoposide
- 2yr survival remains poor
- Role for resection in T1-2, N0-1 disease
- Adjuvant chemo usually given
- Relapse at primary site uncommon after resection
25Bronchial Gland Carcinomas
- About 1 of all lung neoplasms
- Also called primary salivary gland-type tumors or
bronchial adenomas - Centrally located tumors present with irritation,
cough, SOB, hemoptysis, recurrent infection,
wheezing, stridor - Smoking not a risk factor
- Most dont metastasize
- Treatment is complete excision, preservin as much
pulmonary tissue as possible
26Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma
- Slow growing malignant tumor arising from
submucosal glands of the trachea main bronchi - Tend to spread in the submucosal plane along the
lymphatics - Treat of choice is total resection
- Postoperative radiation is given
- Palliative treatment is endoscopic laser removal
radiation
27Mucoepidermoid Carcinoma
- Low or high-grade malignancy
- Have same microscopic appearance as the salivary
gland tumor - Present as submucosal lesions
- Treatment is similar to carcinoid
- High-grade tumors have the same prognosis as
bronchogenic carcinoma - Complete surgical resection is the mainstay of
treatment
28Mucous Gland Adenoma
- Rare, submucosal tumors arising from mucous
glands - Also known as bronchial cysts or papillary
cystadenomas - Benign tumor behavior
- Treated with endoscopic excision
- Surgical resection if endoscopic excision is
contraindicated or incomplete or if distal lung
is damaged by chronic infection
29Surgical Resection of Pulmonary Metastases
- First reported in 1926
- Historically done in pts w/complete resection of
primary tumor, no evidence of recurrence or other
metastatic disease, general good health - Indications for resection of metastases have
become more liberal
30Clinical Presentation Diagnosis
- Asymptomatic in 85
- CXR well-circumscribed spherical, solid mass
with well-defined borders - Usually arise from parenchyma
- Endobronchial mets from renal cell, colon, breast
- Hilar or mediastinal nodal involvement with
pulmonary mets poor prognostic indicator - Solitary lesion metastatic or new primary?
- More likely to be metastatic if primary lesion is
sarcoma or melanoma - More likely new primary if original tumor was
head neck or breast
31Criteria for Surgical Resection
- Disease-free interval time from resection of
primary tumor to diagnosis of mestastases - Tumor doubling time measure of aggressiveness
of tumor growth - Number of metastatic nodules considered
predictive of survival - Resection should only be undertaken if complete
resection is considered feasible - Not every metastatic lesion should be resected
some nodules indicate disseminated disease even
if pulmonary nodule is solitary (breast)
32Metastatectomy Primary Disease/Recurrence
- Metastatic lesion recurrence at primary site
- Resect recurrent primary first
- Primary tumor metastatic disease diagnosed
simultaneously - Resect metastatic disease first if primary tumor
might not be completely resectable
33Preoperative Evaluation
- Similar to that for pulmonary resection for
primary cancer - Pulmonary function post-chemotherapy may be
substantially reduced - Bleomycin mitomycin diminish DLCO cause
ARDS-like picture postop (prevent by using lt35
FiO2 intraop) - Preop cardiac evaluation necessary, especially in
pts receiving doxorubicin - Avoid surgery while pt is neutropenic or
thrombocytopenic
34Surgical Technique
- Two priniciples
- Complete resection of disease
- Maximal sparing of functioning lung tissue
- Anterolateral or posterolateral thoracotomy for
unilateral disease - Bilateral disease should be resected
simultaneously if possible - Median sternotomy or clamshell incision
- VATS doesnt allow palpation of lung its role
is questioned in resection of metastatic disease - Repeat metastatectomy for recurrent disease is
beneficial
35Results
Primary Cancer 5-Year Survival
Renal Cell 54
Head Neck Cancer Squamous cell Glandular tumors Overall 34 64 50
Colorectal Cancer 44
Soft Tissue Sarcoma Incomplete resection No resection Unknown Overall 46 23 17 25
Testicular Germ Cell Tumors 68
36Benign Tumors of the Lung
Epithelial Mesen-chymal Muscle Misc Other Inflam-matory
Polyps Sclerosing hemangioma Leiomyoma Hamartoma Lipoma Plasma cell granuloma
Papilloma Lymphagioma Teratoma Chondroma Pulmonary hyalinizing granuloma
Mucous gland adenoma Granular cell tumor Clear cell tumor Fibroma
Neurilemoma
Neurofibroma
37Hamartoma
- Most frequent benign tumor
- 75 of benign lesions
- Most frequent component is cartilage
- Extremely slow growth
- Do not require excision unless centrally located
cause symptoms of obstruction, etc or carcinoma
cant be ruled out
38Other Benign Tumors
- May present as endobronchial lesions
- May be removed endoscopically
- Surgical excision when diagnosis is in doubt or
when endoscopic excision has been incomplete - Peripheral tumors are often removed for diagnosis