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Lung cancer is a malignant tumor with the highest incidence and mortality rate of cancer patients worldwide. Traditional treatments for lung cancer include surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, etc. Although the growth and spread of the tumor can be controlled to a certain extent, the cure rate for patients with progressive stage is still low and the prognosis is poor.
Neoadjuvant therapy intends to use chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and targeted therapy to reduce the size and load of the tumor before surgery, to improve the surgical resection rate and therapeutic effect.
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Lung cancer is a malignant tumor with the highest incidence and mortality rate of cancer patients worldwide. Traditional treatments for lung cancer include surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, etc. Although the growth and spread of the tumor can be controlled to a certain extent, the cure rate for patients with progressive stage is still low and the prognosis is poor.
Neoadjuvant therapy intends to use chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and targeted therapy to reduce the size and load of the tumor before surgery, to improve the surgical resection rate and therapeutic effect. In lung cancer treatment, neoadjuvant therapy has rate and quality of life. However, a meta-analysis confirmed that although neoadjuvant chemotherapy can significantly improve survival compared to surgery alone, with an OS HR of 0.8, the improvement in 5-year survival is only 5%. Neoadjuvant radiotherapy alone, even if it can lead to pathological remission in resected specimens, does not improve resectability or overall survival. The goal of preoperative radiotherapy is to improve OS by reducing local tumor recurrence, which is the primary goal in patients with Pancoast syndrome, for example, in whom localized lung loss has an impact on quality of life. In the literature, it has been reported that in the early treatment experience of patients with Pancoast syndrome, the percentage of incompletely resected tumors was reduced by neoadjuvant radiotherapy. The MPR or pCR rate of neoadjuvant NSCLC treatment with conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy is less than 10%, and the improvement in 5-year overall survival is only 5%, suggesting that its efficacy is very limited.
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2,000 participants in 2 patient groups
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Ziyun Shen, M.D.; Peng Zhang, Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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