Lung cancer Flashcards
1
Q
Lung cancer
A
Please examine this patient who has had a 3‐month history of chronic cough, malaise and weight loss.
2
Q
Clinical signs
A
- Cachectic
- Clubbing and tar‐stained fingers
- Lymphadenopthy: cervical and axillary
- Tracheal deviation: towards (collapse) or away (effusion) from the lesion
- Reduced expansion
- Percussion note dull (collapse/consolidation) or stony dull (effusion)
- Absent tactile vocal fremitus (effusion); increased vocal resonance (collapse/consolidation)
-
Auscultation:
⚬⚬ Crackles and bronchial breathing (consolidation/collapse)
⚬⚬ Reduced breath sounds; absent tactile fremitus (effusion) - Hepatomegaly or bony tenderness: metastasis
-
Treatment:
⚬⚬ Lobectomy scar
⚬⚬ Radiotherapy: square burn and tattoo - Complications:
3
Q
Complications of lung cancer
A
- Superior vena cava obstruction: suffused and oedematous face and upper limbs, dilated superficial chest veins and stridor
- Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy: hoarse with a ‘bovine’ cough
- Horner’s sign and wasted small muscles of the hand (T1): Pancoast’s tumour
- Endocrine: gynaecomastia (ectopic βHCG)
- Neurological: Lambert–Eaton myasthenia syndrome, peripheral neuropathy, proximal myopathy and paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration
- Dermatological: dermatomyositis (heliotrope rash on eye lids and purple papules on knuckles (Gottron’s papules associated with a raised CK) and acanthosis nigricans
4
Q
Types of lung cancer
A
- Squamous 35%,
- small (oat) 24%,
- adeno 21%,
- large 19% and
- alveolar 1%
5
Q
Management of lung cancer
A
-
Diagnosis of a mass:
* CXR: collapse, mass and hilar lymphadenopathy
* Volume acquisition CT thorax (so small tumours are not lost between slices) with contrast -
Determine cell type:
* Induced sputum cytology
* Biopsy by bronchoscopy (central lesion and collapse) or percutaneous needle CT guided (peripheral lesion; FEV1 >1 L)) -
Stage (CT/bronchoscopy/endobronchial ultrasound guided biopsy /mediastinoscopy/ thoracoscopy/PET):
* Non‐small cell carcinoma (NSCLC): TNM staging to assess operability
* Small cell carcinoma (SCLC): limited or extensive disease -
Lung function tests for operability assessment:
* Pneumonectomy contraindicated if FEV1 < 1.2 L -
Complications of the tumour:
* Metastasis: ↑ LFTs, ↑ Ca++, ↓ Hb
* NSCLC: ↑ PTHrP → ↑ Ca++
* SCLC: ↑ ACTH, SIADH → Na+ ↓
6
Q
Treatment
A
-
NSCLC:
⚬⚬ Surgery: lobectomy or pneumonectomy
⚬⚬ Radiotherapy: single fractionation (weekly) versus hyper‐fractionation (daily for 10 days)
⚬⚬ Chemotherapy: benefit unknown; EGFR Positive – erlotinib -
SCLC:
⚬⚬ Chemotherapy: benefit with six courses
7
Q
Multidisciplinary approach
Palliative care
A
- For brain metastasis: Dexamethasone and radiotherapy
- SVCO: dexamethasone plus radiotherapy or intravascular stent
- For haemoptysis, bone pain and cough: Radiotherapy
- For effusion: Chemical pleurodesis – talc; tetracycline no longer used
- For cough and pain: Opiates