Guideline 'Radiotherapy in non-small-cell lung carcinoma. Working Group, National Organization for Quality Assurance in Hospitals, Netherlands

8000-9000 new patients with lung cancer are diagnosed yearly in the Netherlands. Of these 10-30% can be treated by surgery, which because of co-morbidity or the extent of the disease is impossible in the others. There is agreement on the terms 'curative', 'radical' and 'pall...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inNederlands tijdschrift voor geneeskunde Vol. 142; no. 41; p. 2248
Main Author Festen, J
Format Journal Article
LanguageDutch
Published Netherlands 10.10.1998
Subjects
Online AccessGet more information

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:8000-9000 new patients with lung cancer are diagnosed yearly in the Netherlands. Of these 10-30% can be treated by surgery, which because of co-morbidity or the extent of the disease is impossible in the others. There is agreement on the terms 'curative', 'radical' and 'palliative' radiotherapy: curative radiotherapy aims at cure through destruction of all tumour cells, on the assumption that the neoplasia has not metastasized (this applies to patients with tumours in stage I and II and sometimes in stage III); radical radiotherapy aims at postponement of locoregional tumour growth; this has a positive effect on the patient's duration of survival and quality of life, but it is to be expected that the patient will die from distant metastases (this treatment is indicated for patients with stage IIIA disease); palliative radiotherapy aims at improvement of the quality of life rather than on prolonging the duration of survival. Patients with a stage III tumour (locoregional invasion making surgical treatment impossible but without distant metastases) without complaints should receive radiotherapy, because these patients are candidates for prolonged survival. In the future the best therapy for these patients could be a combined modality (chemotherapy in combination with radiotherapy). Lung cancer patients with an irresectable tumour should be included as often as possible in clinical trials. During treatment checking quality of life, taking into account the objective and the side effects of the treatment, is important. All medical experts who look after the patient, should inform each other on the actual state of health of the patient and any appointments made. A personal file with this information, kept by the patient himself, has been advocated for this purpose.
ISSN:0028-2162