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* From the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute, Tampa, FL.
Correspondence to: W. Michael Alberts, MD, MBA, FCCP, Associate Center Director for Clinical Affairs, H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute, 12902 Magnolia Dr, Tampa, FL 33612
| Introduction |
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| Mortality |
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Lung cancer is currently the leading cause of cancer deaths in both men and women in the United States. Deaths from lung cancer in women surpassed those due to breast cancer in 1987 and are expected to account for about 25% of all female cancer deaths in 2002.1 Thirty-one percent of cancer deaths in men are attributable to lung cancer.1 Lung cancer causes more deaths than the next three most common cancers combined (colon cancer, 48,100 deaths; breast cancer, 40,000 deaths; and prostate, 30,200 deaths).1
Prior to returning to the subject at hand, it must be said that much of the effort evidenced in this publication might not be necessary but for the real culprit, namely, tobacco and tobacco products. Tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable death in this country and accounts for one of every five deaths.3 Half of regular smokers die prematurely of a tobacco-related disease.3 Not to minimize the efforts of clinicians and clinical researchers, but let us be honest; the "biggest bang for the buck" comes in the form of lung cancer prevention. Whether primary, secondary, or tertiary, the prevention of cigarette smoking has the biggest potential to improve the dismal statistics associated with lung cancer.
Unfortunately, should tobacco and its products magically disappear tomorrow, the health of the population would continue to be victimized for decades to come. Even today, more former smokers than active smokers develop lung cancer. Eventually though, lung cancer would be relegated to "case report" status, a spot it enjoyed in the 19th century and up to the advent of widespread cigarette use in the 20th century. Most chest physicians would cheer the day that their efforts could be refocused from tobacco-induced disease to other diseases of the chest.
| Treatment |
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Although a 15% 5-year survival rate is meager and still dismal, the near doubling of the 5-year survival rate has provided some room for optimism and has begun to shift the nihilism associated with lung cancer treatment into a guarded optimism. One might take solace from the fact that 7% of newly diagnosed patients (or nearly 12,000 patients) will survive in 2002 but would not have been successfully treated in 1960. In addition, a number of promising new drugs have been incorporated into clinical trials, and many more are in the pipeline. Specifically targeted biological therapies are particularly promising. New diagnostic modalities, such as positron emission tomography, are finding widespread use and may alter our diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms. New surgical procedures and techniques have been developed and perfected. Safer and more effective methods of delivering radiation are coming into clinical use, and many people in the medical community are cautiously hopeful that lung cancer screening will prove able to convey a survival benefit and be cost effective.
| Lung Cancer Guidelines Project |
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The size of the task was daunting, but the goal was laudable. The effort expended on this project by many individuals has been truly heroic. The voluntary effort of the section editors, the writing committees, and the review panels in support of this publication and our patients has been nothing less than impressive. I am very pleased with the final product and hope that it proves to be of benefit to you and your patients.
Special thanks go to Gene Colice, MD, as Vice-Chair of the Lung Cancer Guidelines Project, and Doug McCrory, MD, as the Principal Investigator with the Duke University Evidence-based Practice Center. Both devoted many extra hours, nights, and weekends over the past 2 years to ensure the success of the project. Members of the Health and Science Policy Committee and the American College of Chest Physicians Board of Regents deserve recognition for their review and editing of the final manuscript. The true driving force, however, behind this effort has been Sandra Lewis, PhD, who, as Project Manager, has brought the project to this point through sheer effort and diplomatic prodding. A thank you to her is certainly in order.
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. Milroy New American College of Chest Physicians Lung Cancer Guidelines*: An Important Addition to the Lung Cancer Guidelines Armamentarium Chest, September 1, 2007; 132(3): 744 - 746. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. M. Kahn, L. Goitein, D. R. Ouellette, and R. S. Irwin Pharmaceutical Industry Sponsorship of Journal Supplements Chest, May 1, 2006; 129(5): 1387 - 1388. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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