We're completing our respiratory diseases section with lung cancer - the leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide. Lung cancer represents a group of malignancies arising from the respiratory epithelium, with diverse histological subtypes and clinical behaviors. I'll guide you through the major classifications, risk factors, diagnostic approaches, staging systems, and evolving treatment paradigms. Understanding lung cancer is crucial as early detection and targeted therapies are transforming outcomes. Let's explore this complex field where oncology meets pulmonary medicine!
π©Ί Epidemiology and Risk Factors
Lung cancer incidence and mortality patterns reflect complex interactions between environmental exposures, genetic susceptibility, and demographic factors.
Key Epidemiological Facts
- Leading cause of cancer death worldwide
- ~2.2 million new cases annually
- ~1.8 million deaths annually
- 5-year survival: ~20% overall
- Incidence decreasing in men, plateauing in women
Major Risk Factors
- Tobacco smoking: 85-90% of cases
- Radon exposure: Second leading cause
- Occupational exposures: Asbestos, silica
- Air pollution: PM2.5, diesel exhaust
- Family history: Genetic predisposition
| Risk Factor | Relative Risk | Key Pathogens/Carcinogens | Prevention Strategies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Active Smoking | 10-30 fold increase | Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, nitrosamines | Smoking cessation, public health campaigns |
| Secondhand Smoke | 1.2-1.3 fold increase | Same as active smoking, lower dose | Smoke-free policies, education |
| Radon Gas | 1.1-1.2 fold increase | Alpha particle radiation | Home testing, ventilation systems |
| Occupational | Variable (2-50 fold) | Asbestos, arsenic, chromium, nickel | Workplace safety, protective equipment |
π Classification and Pathophysiology
Lung cancer classification has evolved from simple small cell vs non-small cell to complex molecular subtypes that guide treatment selection.
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)
- 85% of all lung cancers
- Adenocarcinoma (40%)
- Squamous cell (25%)
- Large cell (10%)
- Better prognosis than SCLC
Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)
- 15% of lung cancers
- Strong smoking association
- Rapid growth, early metastasis
- Responsive to chemotherapy
- Poor long-term survival
Molecular Pathogenesis
- Field cancerization concept
- Multiple genetic alterations
- Driver mutations (EGFR, ALK, KRAS)
- Epigenetic changes
- Tumor microenvironment
π¨ββοΈ Clinical Presentation
Lung cancer symptoms reflect local tumor effects, regional spread, distant metastases, and paraneoplastic syndromes. Many patients present with advanced disease.
Common Presenting Symptoms
Local/Regional Effects
- Cough (new or changed character)
- Hemoptysis
- Chest pain
- Dyspnea
- Wheezing/stridor
- Post-obstructive pneumonia
Metastatic Symptoms
- Bone pain (bone metastases)
- Neurological symptoms (CNS mets)
- Jaundice (liver metastases)
- Supraclavicular lymphadenopathy
- Weight loss, fatigue
Paraneoplastic Syndromes
| Syndrome | Associated Cancer | Key Features | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|
| SIADH | SCLC | Hyponatremia, euvolemia | ADH or ADH-like hormone secretion |
| Eaton-Lambert | SCLC | Proximal muscle weakness | Autoantibodies to voltage-gated calcium channels |
| Hypercalcemia | Squamous cell | Confusion, polyuria, stones | PTHrP secretion |
| Cushing's Syndrome | SCLC, carcinoid | Hypokalemia, hyperglycemia | ACTH or ACTH-like hormone production |
| Hypertrophic Osteoarthropathy | Adenocarcinoma | Clubbing, joint pain | Unknown, possibly VEGF-mediated |
π Diagnostic Approach
Lung cancer diagnosis involves imaging for detection and characterization, tissue sampling for histology, and molecular testing for treatment selection.
Diagnostic Pathway
| Modality | Purpose | Key Findings | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chest X-ray | Initial detection | Solitary pulmonary nodule, mass, effusion | Poor sensitivity for small lesions, lymph nodes |
| CT Scan | Characterization, staging | Size, location, lymph nodes, metastases | Radiation exposure, false positives |
| PET-CT | Staging, treatment response | Metabolic activity, distant metastases | False positives (inflammation), cost |
| Bronchoscopy | Tissue diagnosis | Direct visualization, biopsies | Limited to central lesions, procedural risks |
| CT-guided Biopsy | Peripheral lesions | High diagnostic yield | Pneumothorax risk, bleeding |
| Molecular Testing | Treatment selection | EGFR, ALK, ROS1, BRAF, other mutations | Tissue requirements, turnaround time |
π Staging and Prognosis
Accurate staging using the TNM system is essential for prognosis and treatment planning. Staging differs between NSCLC and SCLC.
TNM Staging System (NSCLC 8th Edition)
| Component | Description | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| T (Tumor) | Primary tumor size/invasion | T1: β€3cm, T2: >3-5cm, T3: >5-7cm, T4: >7cm or invasion |
| N (Nodes) | Regional lymph node involvement | N1: ipsilateral peribronchial/hilar, N2: ipsilateral mediastinal, N3: contralateral/supraclavicular |
| M (Metastasis) | Distant spread | M1a: contralateral lung/pleura, M1b: single extratoracic, M1c: multiple extratoracic |
Stage Grouping and Survival
Early Stage (I-II)
- Stage IA: 5-year survival ~90%
- Stage IB: 5-year survival ~85%
- Stage IIA: 5-year survival ~70%
- Stage IIB: 5-year survival ~60%
- Treatment: Surgery Β± adjuvant chemo
Advanced Stage (III-IV)
- Stage III: 5-year survival ~30%
- Stage IV: 5-year survival ~5%
- Treatment: Multimodal, palliative focus
- New therapies improving outcomes
π Treatment Strategies
Lung cancer treatment has evolved from histology-based to biomarker-driven approaches, with personalized therapy based on molecular characteristics.
Treatment Modalities
| Modality | Indications | Key Approaches | Recent Advances |
|---|---|---|---|
| Surgery | Early stage NSCLC | Lobectomy (standard), segmentectomy, pneumonectomy | VATS, robotic surgery, sublobar resections |
| Radiation | All stages, palliative care | SBRT for early stage, conventional for locally advanced | Proton therapy, IMRT, SABR |
| Chemotherapy | Adjuvant, advanced disease | Platinum doublets (cisplatin/carboplatin + agent) | Maintenance therapy, metronomic dosing |
| Targeted Therapy | Actionable mutations | EGFR inhibitors, ALK inhibitors, other TKIs | Next-generation inhibitors, combination approaches |
| Immunotherapy | Advanced NSCLC, selected SCLC | PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors (pembrolizumab, nivolumab) | Combination regimens, biomarkers for selection |
Molecular Targets and Therapies
Common Targets
- EGFR: Erlotinib, Osimertinib
- ALK: Crizotinib, Alectinib
- ROS1: Crizotinib, Entrectinib
- BRAF: Dabrafenib + Trametinib
- NTRK: Larotrectinib, Entrectinib
Treatment Selection
- PD-L1 expression guides immunotherapy
- Comprehensive molecular profiling
- Tissue and liquid biopsy options
- Clinical trial consideration
- Sequential therapy strategies
π± Screening and Prevention
Lung cancer screening and prevention strategies aim to reduce mortality through early detection and risk factor modification.
Screening Criteria
- Age 50-80 years
- 20 pack-year smoking history
- Current smoker or quit <15 years
- Annual low-dose CT scan
- Shared decision-making required
Prevention Strategies
- Tobacco cessation programs
- Radon testing and mitigation
- Occupational exposure reduction
- Healthy diet and exercise
- Air quality improvements
Emerging Approaches
- Risk-based screening models
- Blood-based biomarkers
- Breath analysis technologies
- Chemoprevention trials
- AI-assisted imaging analysis
π§ Key Takeaways
- Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality worldwide
- Major types: NSCLC (85%) and SCLC (15%) with distinct behaviors
- Tobacco smoking is the predominant risk factor, but never-smokers also develop lung cancer
- Presentation varies from asymptomatic to local symptoms, metastases, or paraneoplastic syndromes
- Diagnosis requires imaging, tissue sampling, and molecular profiling
- Staging determines prognosis and treatment approach
- Treatment has evolved to include targeted therapy and immunotherapy alongside traditional modalities
- Screening with low-dose CT reduces mortality in high-risk populations
π§ Conclusion
We've completed our comprehensive journey through lung cancer, studentβfrom epidemiology and risk factors to the revolutionary advances in targeted therapies and immunotherapy. Remember that lung cancer management requires a multidisciplinary approach and personalized treatment strategies based on histology and molecular profiling. I encourage you to understand the importance of molecular testing and the rapid evolution of treatment options in this field. Excellent work completing the respiratory diseases section! Next, we'll move to gastrointestinal diseases, starting with peptic ulcer disease.
In lung cancer care, personalized medicine has transformed outcomes - the right treatment for the right patient at the right time.