Intro & Risks - Genesis Glimpse
Lung cancer: leading malignancy. Two main groups:
- NSCLC (~85%):
- Adenocarcinoma: Most common, esp. non-smokers.
- Squamous Cell: Central, smoking.
- Large Cell.
- SCLC (~15%): Very aggressive, smoking.
Major Risks:
- Smoking (paramount, 80-90%).
- Asbestos, Radon.
- Genetics, chronic lung disease.
- Air pollution (PM2.5). 📌 Risks: Smoking, Asbestos, Radon, Genetics (SARG). India: ↑ incidence, esp. males; Adenocarcinoma rising.
⭐ Adenocarcinoma is the most common lung cancer in non-smokers.
Clinical Clues - Symptom Spectrum
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Common Symptoms: Cough (persistent/changed), dyspnea, chest pain, hemoptysis, weight loss, fatigue.
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Local Invasion/Compression:
- SVC Obstruction: Facial/arm swelling, plethora, dilated veins.

- Horner's (Pancoast): Ptosis, miosis, anhydrosis.
- SVC Obstruction: Facial/arm swelling, plethora, dilated veins.
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Paraneoplastic Syndromes:
Syndrome With Mediator/Mechanism SIADH SCLC Ectopic ADH → Hyponatremia Cushing's SCLC Ectopic ACTH → ↑Cortisol Hypercalcemia Squamous Cell PTHrP Lambert-Eaton SCLC Anti-presynaptic Ca2+ channels 📌 Small Cell Loves Creating Syndromes: SIADH, Cushing's, Lambert-Eaton.
⭐ Lambert-Eaton Myasthenic Syndrome (LEMS) is commonly associated with Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) and presents with proximal muscle weakness that improves with activity.
Diagnosis & Staging - Unmasking & Mapping
- Initial Imaging:
- CXR: Initial; shows nodule, mass, effusion.
- CT Chest (contrast): Gold standard; details lesion, nodes, local invasion. Essential for T.
- Biopsy - Tissue is the Issue: (Confirms histology: NSCLC/SCLC, molecular markers)
- Sputum cytology (central lesions)
- Bronchoscopy: Central lesions, EBUS-FNA (mediastinal/hilar nodes).
- EUS-FNA (posterior nodes/adrenal).
- TTNA: CT-guided, peripheral lesions.
- Staging - Mapping the Spread:
- PET-CT: For N & M staging (NSCLC focus).
⭐ PET-CT is crucial for detecting distant metastases in NSCLC staging, impacts resectability & treatment.
- TNM (Simplified):
- T: Size/local extent (T1 ≤3cm; T4 vital invasion). Impacts resectability.
- N: Node spread (N0 none; N1-N3 ↑). Prognostic.
- M: Mets (M0 none; M1 distant). M1 often palliative.
- PET-CT: For N & M staging (NSCLC focus).
- Diagnostic Flow (SPN):

Treatment Toolkit - Therapy Tactics
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC): Treatment guided by stage and molecular markers.
- Early Stages (I-II): Curative surgery. Adjuvant chemotherapy for high-risk (e.g., stage IB >4cm, II).
- Locally Advanced (Stage III): Concurrent Chemotherapy + Radiotherapy (CRT) for unresectable disease. Consider consolidation immunotherapy (e.g., Durvalumab).
- Metastatic (Stage IV): Systemic therapy.
- Chemotherapy (platinum-doublets).
- Targeted Therapy: For driver mutations (EGFR: Osimertinib; ALK: Alectinib; ROS1: Crizotinib).
- Immunotherapy: PD-1/PD-L1 inhibitors (e.g., Pembrolizumab), alone or with chemo, based on PD-L1.
Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC): Highly chemo/radiosensitive.
- Limited Stage (LS-SCLC): Concurrent Chemotherapy (etoposide + platinum) + Thoracic Radiotherapy. Curative intent.
- Extensive Stage (ES-SCLC): Chemotherapy (etoposide + platinum) +/- Immunotherapy (e.g., Atezolizumab, Durvalumab).
- Prophylactic Cranial Irradiation (PCI): For LS-SCLC with good response; consider for ES-SCLC with good response to reduce brain mets.
⭐ Osimertinib is a key targeted therapy for EGFR T790M mutation-positive NSCLC.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Adenocarcinoma: Most common overall, especially in non-smokers & women; peripheral.
- Squamous Cell Ca: Strong smoking link; central; hypercalcemia (PTHrP).
- SCLC: Central, aggressive; SIADH, Lambert-Eaton syndrome; chemo-sensitive.
- Pancoast Tumor: Apical (superior sulcus); causes Horner's syndrome, shoulder/arm pain.
- Screening: Low-Dose CT (LDCT) for high-risk (age 50-80, >20 pack-year history, current/quit <15 yrs).
- Paraneoplastic syndromes: Common, especially with SCLC (e.g., Cushing's, cerebellar degeneration).
- NSCLC Staging: TNM is crucial; PET-CT for mets. EGFR/ALK/ROS1 testing for targeted therapy in adenocarcinoma.
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