Bronchial carcinoma Flashcards
Background on bronchial carcinoma
Most common lethal cancer in AUstralia
Usually occuring in smokers
Poor prognosis
Clinical features
Mostly present at 50-70yo
Only 10-25% are asymptomatic at diagnosis
If symptomatic, the cancer is usually advanced and not resectable
Key sx of bronchial carcinoma
Cough Chest pain Wheeze Haemoptysis SOB
Constitutional:
Anorexia, malaise, fatigue, unexplained weight loss, night sweats
Investigations for bronchial carcinoma
CXR CT Scanning Bronchoscopy PET scanning Fluorescence bronchoscopy (helps early detection) Tissue diagnosis where possible
What are the more common causes of a solitary pulmonary nodule on CXR?
Bronchial carcinoma
Solitary metastasis
Granuloma (TB)
Hamartoma
Management of bronchial carcinoma
Refer to respiratory physician to determine type of cancer
Main aim of management - achieve curative resection of NSCLC (non small cell lung cancer) in those who can benefit from it
Resection not an option in SCLC because it metastasises so rapidly –> 80% will have by time of diagnosis
Chemotherapy has important place in treating NSCLC, but only extends life expectancy by 3-20 months in SCLC
Main role of radiotherapy is palliative