Describe the prognosis.
Overall 5‑year survival rate: approx. 20%
SCLC
Limited disease 5-year survival: 16% (median survival up to 20 months)
Extended disease 5-year survival: 3% (median survival up to 13 months)
NSCLC
Better prognosis
Depends primarily on the extent of disease and lymph node status
Locally confined stages (no lymph node involvement, no metastasis) have a 5-year survival rate of approx. 60–70%.
Describe the Smoking cessation
Smoking cessation can reduce the risk of developing lung cancer by up to 50% after 5–10 years. After 15–20 years, the risk of lung cancer is the same as that of never smokers. [80][81][82]
General measures: counseling on smoking cessation and behavioral support (e.g., cognitive behavioral therapy)
Pharmacological measures
Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT): gum, lozenges, transdermal patches, inhalers, nasal spray
Replaces tobacco with other sources of nicotine to reduce craving and withdrawal symptoms until complete nicotine cessation becomes possible.
Combined NRT medications (e.g., nicotine patch, a long-acting form of NRT, plus nicotine gum, a short-acting form of NRT) increase the likelihood of success
Bupropion: reduces craving and withdrawal symptoms
Varenicline (alpha-4-beta-2 nACHR partial agonist): reduces craving and withdrawal symptoms
Describe lung cancer screening.
The following recommendations are consistent with those of the US Preventive Services Task Force.
Annual screening with a low-dose CT scan in patients 50–80 years of age with ≥ 20 pack-year smoking history who have smoked within the past 15 years [85]
Discontinue screening if the patient:
Has abstained from smoking for 15 years
Develops a comorbidity that substantially limits their life expectancy
Expresses unwillingness to have curative lung surgery
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