4.5 Article

Small Cell Lung Cancer: Are We Making Progress?

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES
Volume 339, Issue 1, Pages 68-76

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1097/MAJ.0b013e3181bccef5

Keywords

Small cell lung cancer; Chemotherapy; Radiation therapy

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Although the incidence of small cell lung cancer (SCLC) has declined during the past 30 years, it remains a significant cause of cancer mortality in the United States and across the world. With appropriate treatment, about 20% of patients who present with limited stage SCLC call be Cured of their disease. Unfortunately, the outcome for the remainder of patients is extremely poor. The only significant advance in extensive stage SCLC in the past 2 decades is the recent discovery that prophylactic cranial irradiation improves survival in those patients whose disease has responded to initial Chemotherapy. Numerous attempts to enhance the antitumor effects of chemotherapy for SCLC have not been Successful. As the understanding of the biology of SCLC increased, a number of rational molecular targets for therapy have been identified. Although initial attempts at targeted therapy in SCLC have been unsuccessful. several newly identified targets hold promise and give hope that significant improvements in therapy for this challenging disease are not far away.

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