Treatment and Outcomes for Elderly Patients with Small Cell Lung Cancer
- 1 September 2000
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Drugs & Aging
- Vol. 17 (3) , 229-247
- https://doi.org/10.2165/00002512-200017030-00006
Abstract
It is estimated that approximately half of the 500 000 people diagnosed with lung cancer worldwide every year are aged >70 years. Thus, this disease represents a major problem in the elderly and one that will indeed increase as the median age of the population increases. For small cell lung cancer (SCLC), which accounts for approximately 20% of cases of lung cancer, the primary treatment is chemotherapy and in the majority of cases the primary aim is to control the disease which generally would have spread beyond the lungs at the time of presentation. A small number of ‘standard’ chemotherapy regimens (combined with radiotherapy for patients with limited disease) have been shown to improve survival and quality of life and are widely used. Much of the work investigating the relationship between age and treatment outcomes has been based on clinical trial data and may itself be inherently biased due to trial eligibility criteria excluding elderly patients. However, there is no good evidence that elderly patients fare worse with treatment than their younger counterparts in terms of response rates and survival. Nevertheless with increasing age comes increasing concomitant illnesses which may account for the widely observed increases in drug toxicity, and this may be the primary consideration in selecting the treatment option. Thus for many elderly patients, carboplatin/etoposide may be the treatment of choice because it is perhaps the least toxic of the standard regimens. Whatever regimen is chosen, the key to treatment effectiveness seems to be to deliver the first 3 or 4 cycles without delay or dosage reduction. Although palliation of symptoms remains a major goal in the treatment of all patients with SCLC there is a dearth of data on whether elderly patients are equally well palliated as their younger counterparts. There is no good evidence that age per se should be a factor in deciding whether patients should receive standard treatment rather than a more gentle approach, and more elderly patients should be included in clinical trials. The key areas where more information is required regarding the treatment and outcomes of elderly patients with SCLC are the assessment of palliation, and comprehensive reviews of all patients diagnosed with the disease, not just those included in trials.Keywords
This publication has 148 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analysis of thrombocytopenia due to carboplatin combined with etoposide in elderly patients with lung cancerZeitschrift für Krebsforschung und Klinische Onkologie, 1996
- A prospective randomised study in limited disease small cell carcinoma—Doxorubicin and vincristine plus either cyclophosphamide or etoposideEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1995
- Neurological and cognitive impairment in long-term survivors of small cell lung cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1994
- Predicting septic complications of chemotherapy: An analysis of 382 patients treated for small cell lung cancer without dose reduction after major sepsisEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1993
- Teniposide as single drug therapy for elderly patients affected by small cell lung cancerEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1992
- Epirubicin in previously untreated patients with small cell lung cancer: A phase II study by the EORTC lung cancer cooperative groupEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1992
- Retrospective review of chemotherapy for small cell lung cancer in the elderly: Does the end justify the means?European Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1991
- Effective new low toxicity chemotherapy with carboplatin, vinblastine and methotrexate for small cell lung cancer: a randomised trial against doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide and etoposideEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1991
- Prognostic factors in small cell lung cancer: A simple prognostic index is better than conventional stagingEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1987
- Chemotherapy with or without Radiation Therapy in Limited Small-Cell Carcinoma of the LungNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987