Parneet K Cheema, Paul F Wheatley-Price, Matthew J Cecchini, Peter M Ellis, Alexander V Louie, Sara Moore, Brandon S Sheffield, Jonathan D Spicer, Patrick James Villeneuve, Natasha B Leighl
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Therapeutic strategies for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are advancing, with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) and targeted therapies making their way into neoadjuvant and adjuvant settings. With recent advances, there was a need for multidisciplinary lung cancer healthcare providers from across Ontario to convene and review recent data from practical and implementation standpoints. The focus was on the following questions: (1) To what extent do patient (e.g., history of smoking) and disease (e.g., histology, tumor burden, nodal involvement) characteristics influence treatment approaches? (2) What are the surgical considerations in early-stage NSCLC? (3) What is the role of radiation therapy in the context of recent evidence? (4) What is the impact of biomarker testing on treatment planning? Ongoing challenges, treatment gaps, outstanding questions, and controversies with the data were assessed through a pre-meeting survey, interactive cases, and polling questions. By reviewing practice patterns across Ontario cancer centers in the context of evolving clinical data, Health Canada indications, and provincial (Cancer Care Ontario [CCO]) funding approvals, physicians treating lung cancer voiced their opinions on how new approaches should be integrated into provincial treatment algorithms. This report summarizes the forum outcomes, including pre-meeting survey and polling question results, as well as agreements on treatment approaches based on specific patient scenarios.
期刊介绍:
Current Oncology is a peer-reviewed, Canadian-based and internationally respected journal. Current Oncology represents a multidisciplinary medium encompassing health care workers in the field of cancer therapy in Canada to report upon and to review progress in the management of this disease.
We encourage submissions from all fields of cancer medicine, including radiation oncology, surgical oncology, medical oncology, pediatric oncology, pathology, and cancer rehabilitation and survivorship. Articles published in the journal typically contain information that is relevant directly to clinical oncology practice, and have clear potential for application to the current or future practice of cancer medicine.