Aetiology
- Inhalation of carcinogens:
- SMOKING
- Asbestos - chrysotile fibres most common and account for majority of cases, crocidolite (amphibole) is the most dangerous type due to straight structure
- Pollution
Pathophysiology
Small cell lung cancer (SCLC) - 25%
- Rapidly progressive disease - early metastases
- Worst prognosis of all types of lung cancer
- Central tumour
- Associated with ectopic ACTH secretion → Cushing’s
- Associated with SIADH → hyponatremia
Non small-cell lung cancer
Adenocarcinoma - 35%
- Type most likely to be found in non-smokers
- Type most closely linked with asbestos
- Peripheral tumour
Squamous cell carcinoma - 30%
- Most common type in smokers
- Central tumour
- Local spread common
- Ectopic PTHrP release → hypercalcaemia
Large cell carcinoma - 10%
- Second-worst survival prognosis - early metastases
- Peripheral tumour
Paraneoplastic syndromes - non-endocrine, nonmetastatic complication
- Lambert-Eaton syndrome: disorder of neuromuscular transmission causing muscle weakness, depressed tendon reflexes etc.
- Thrombophlebitis: blood clot formation
- Anaemia
- Hypertrophic pulmonary osteoarthropathy (HPOA): joint stiffness, severe pain in wrists and ankles
Common sites of metastases from a primary lung cancer
- Brain
- Liver
- Adrenal
- Bone
Clinical presentation
General symptoms
- Cough 3 weeks +
- Dyspnoea - due to airway obstruction
- Haemoptysis - due to erosion of a blood vessel by the tumour
- Chest or shoulder pain - pleuritic chest pain indicates invasion of the pleura
- Unexplained weight loss
- Unexplained tiredness/lack of energy
Symptoms associated with invasion of the mediastinum + compression of structures
- Pancoast’s tumour: tumour in the lung apex infiltrates the brachial plexus causing Horner’s syndrome: miosis, ptosis and anhidrosis
- Recurrent laryngeal nerve - hoarse voice
- Pericardium - breathlessness, AF, pericardial effusion
- Oesophagus - dysphagia
- SVC - puffy eyelids, headache, distension of the jugular veins and veins on the chest (anastomoses)
Signs
- Stridor
- Clubbing
- Enlarged liver
- Lymphadenopathy
- Tracheal deviation
- Involvement of the pleura may cause pleural rub and stony dull percussion
- Recurrent pneumonia - tumours which block the bronchi can stop the mucosillary escalator from functioning
Investigations
Bloods
- FBC
- Coagulation screen
- ↓ Na+, ↑Ca2+ indicates malignancy
CXR
- Peripheral tumours (adenocarcinoma and large cell carcinoma) arise beyond the hilum and are rarely visible on CXR
- Central tumours (squamous cell carcinoma and SCLC) arise at/close to the hilum; they are indicated by hilar enlargement and distal collapse/consolidation
Biopsy
- Bronchoscopy and biopsy for central tumours
- CT guided biopsy for peripheral tumours
- Aspiration of lymph nodes and pleural fluid
Other imaging
- CT thorax - used to stage (tumour size, metastases, local invasion, lymph node involvement)
- PET scan - metastases
- USS - pleural effusion, movement of diaphragm, subphrenic abscess
Management
SCLC
- Chemotherapy +/- radiotherapy
NSCLC
- Peripheral tumours (large cell, adenocarcinoma) with no metastases can be excised
- Chemotherapy +/- radiotherapy
Palliative measures
- Chemo/radiotherapy
- Stenting
- Analgesia, antiemetics
Targeted treatments
- Based on tumour markers e.g. TTF in adenocarcinoma, nuclear antigen p63 and HMW cytokeratins in squamous cell carcinoma → allows more targeted chemotherapy regiments to be developed
- EGRF gene in adenocarcinoma → tyrosine kinase inhibitors
- Some NSCLCs express PD-L1 which inactivates cytotoxic immune response - targeted therapy can inhibit this effect and enhance immune killing of the tumour