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Enhance Your Thoracic Oncology Program Through Prevention and
Screening
Pamela Matten, RN, BSN, OCNNurse Navigator Thoracic Oncology Program
The Center for Cancer Prevention & TreatmentSt. Joseph Hospital
Why Lung Cancer Research is Needed
• Estimated deaths by cancer type in the U.S. for 2009 are from the American Cancer Society Facts and Figures, 2009
• Annual funding figures represent the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and Department of Defense estimated 2009 spending
Objectives
• Purpose and history of lung screening• Findings of the National Lung Screening Trial
(NLST)• Navigators’ role in screening• Developing a successful computed tomography
(CT) lung screening program• Role of the multidisciplinary conferences and
screening• Prevention; smoking cessation
Why Is CT Lung Screening So Important?
Lung cancer, as the most lethal cancer in the world, presents an enormous health care
challenge. However, the key to reversing the situation may be in embracing a public health
sensibility in harnessing the power of CT imaging in a carefully validated approach to the early
management of lung cancer. - AK Ganti, 2006
National Lung Screening Trial
• New clinical evidence from the NLST indicates “Screening with the use of low-dose CT reduces mortality from lung cancer. The rate of death from any cause was reduced in the low-dose CT group, as compared with the radiology group.”
National Lung Screening Trial. 2011.
14th World Conference on Lung Cancer
• “This is the most important publication in lung cancer in a decade.…We can expect to see a shift in lung cancer, with changes in management that hail a new era in lung cancer treatment.…We are on the crest of a wave of an enormous change in lung cancer.”
- Dr. John Field, Chair, International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer CT Screening Task Force
Pertinence for Today
• When guidelines for screening are established, patients will be looking to their community hospitals for screening programs
• The thoracic nurse navigators’ role, experience and ability to act as liaison between patient and physicians, makes them ideal candidates to implement and manage a CT screening program
Purpose for Screening
• Key to saving lives– Find lung cancer early– Surveillance of suspicious nodules
• Lung cancer screening provides a teachable moment for promoting smoking cessation and relapse prevention1
• Helps grow your thoracic oncology program
1Park ER, et al. Ann Behav Med. 2009;37(3):268-279.
History of CT Lung Screening
• 1970-1980: Studies of chest x-rays disappointing for people considered high risk for lung cancer; CT introduced
• CT scanners gradually became widely available• In 1991, radiology researchers led by Claudia
Henschke, MD, began investigating the potential of CT scans to provide the screening benefit that chest x-rays failed to show
International Early Lung Cancer Action Program (I-ELCAP)
• Ongoing observational study and research program initially started in New York state
• 50,000+ participants/13 states/8 countries• Purpose: Assess impact of CT lung screening and
improve protocol• Results: Participants with stage I cancer with surgical
resection within 1 month of diagnosis had survival rate of 92%
• Criticized because it did not address a mortality benefit from lung cancer screening
www.ielcap.org/
National Lung Screening Trial
• Launched in 2002 by National Cancer Institute• Goal to determine if CT scan could reduce number
of lung cancer deaths by at least 20%• Recruited 53,000+ current and former smokers
aged 55 to 74 who smoked for 30 pack-years• Half screened with chest x-ray, half with CT scans• Trial stopped 2 years early in 2010 when observers
discovered there were already 20.3% fewer lung cancer deaths with CT scan
www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/noteworthy-trials/nlst.
NLST Results in Perspective: A Comparison of Mortality Benefit
• NLST results: 20.3%• This is extremely significant• Mammography screening: 15%• PSA testing: 0% in US trials; 20% in Swedish trial
www.cancer.gov/clinicaltrials/noteworthy-trials/nlst.
What About False Positives?
• A comparison of x-ray vs CT suggests the magnitude of over diagnosis with low-dose CT compared with radiographic screening is not large
• 10% to 30% of those screened for cancer will have a positive screen requiring further testing
• 13% of those screened using the I-ELCAP protocol will have a positive screen
What About Other Screening Methods?
• Blood, urine, breath, or sputum or genetic link?• Research is ongoing to find biomarkers that
could uncover a genetic clue that a person is predisposed to lung cancer
• This is harder than we thought and may take decades to realize
• Currently no other method of screening for lung cancer has been found to be effective
What About Radiation Exposure?• “…the decrease in the rate of death from any cause
with the use of low-dose CT screening suggests that such screening is not on the whole deleterious”1
• Screening CT delivers exposure to 0.3 to 0.55 mSv of radiation, which is the equivalent of 2 chest x-rays2 or 1-2 mammograms3
• The potential problems can be safely managed with adherence to a well developed protocol for the screening, diagnosis and treatment of early lung cancer
1NLST Research Team. N Engl J Med. 2011;365:395-409. 2Diederich S, et al. Cancer. 2000;89:2457-2460. 3Brenner DJ, et al. Radiology. 2004;232:735-738. ..
Fleischner Society GuidelinesNodule size, mm Low-risk patients High-risk patients≤4 No follow-up needed Follow-up at 12 months.
If no change, no further imaging needed
>4-6 Follow-up at 12 months. If no change, no further imaging needed
Initial follow-up CT at 6-12 months and then at 18-24 months if no change
>6-8 Initial follow-up CT at 6-12 months and then at 18-24 months if no change
Initial follow-up CT at 3-6 months and then at 9-12 and 24 months if no change
>8 Follow-up CTs at around 3, 9, and 24 months. Dynamic contrast-enhanced CT, PET, and/or biopsy
Same as for low-risk patients
Multidisciplinary Conference: A Great Venue for Presenting
Abnormal Screening CTs
Case Study
• 64-year-old woman with chronic smoking history >20 pack-years
• Referred by primary care physician (PCP) for CT screening
• Screening revealed a 2.13-mm spiculated nodule
• Radiologist recommends follow-up with diagnostic scan in 1 year
Original CT Screening
Repeat CT Scan 14 Months LaterNodule 5 mm
Presented at Multidisciplinary Conference
• Nodule increased to 5 mm• Recommendations – surgical consult• Surgeon is cautious since nodule is so small –
wait 3 months then repeat CT
Repeat CT 4 Months LaterNodule 6.65 mm
Case Study Conclusions
• Minimally invasive video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS)
• 3 days in hospital• Pathology; 7 mm adenocarcinoma• Patient referred to postoperative physical and
respiratory rehabilitation 3x times 3 weeks• Surveillance CT every 6 months for 1 year and
every year thereafter
Developing a CT Screening Program
• The thoracic nurse navigators’ role, experience and ability to act as liaison between patient and physicians, makes them ideal candidates to implement and manage a CT screening program
• Nurse navigators are directly involved in development and enhancement processes aimed at improving clinical outcomes for oncology patients. The nurse navigator educates patients about cancer prevention, screening, diagnosis, treatment options, and the importance of early detection of cancer
How Do You Start?
• Build your team• Determine the costs• Set screening guidelines• Capture the data• Market the program• Overcome challenges
Building Your Team
• Identify a physician champion• Nurse navigator is a key element• Meet with key players: radiology, reimbursement,
billing, administration, legal• Give evidence-based facts: Screening Saves Lives• Have a clear purpose and vision• Develop ownership through brainstorming• Each key player implements their piece
Nurse Navigator’s Role
• Act as liaison between patient and physician• Implement & manage CT lung screening program• Directly involved in program development and
enhancement• Educates patients about:– Smoking cessation– Screening results– Further work-up/diagnosis– Treatment options– Importance of early detection
Worth the Cost
• CT lung screening is value added for your program
• “…the cost of surgery for stage I lung cancer is less than half that of late-stage treatment…”1
• St. Joseph Hospital increased analytical cases by 10% each year since starting CT lung screening
1Henschke CI, et al. Thorac Surg Clin. 2007;17(2):137-142.
Worth the Cost (cont.)
• CT lung screening is not covered by most insurance plans, including Medicare
• Screening needs to be affordable for your patient demographics
• Consider setting a low cash pay price ($125)– No insurance billed
• Develop a CPT code for the procedure• Determine if you will provide financial aid to
uninsured
Screening Guidelines
• No national screening guidelines• The new data will be reviewed by the US
Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) in 2012 • The American Society of Clinical Oncology
(ASCO) is developing clinical practice guidelines on lung cancer screening with the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN), American Cancer Society (ACS), and the American College of Chest Physicians
Screening Guidelines (cont.)
• Set your criteria for screening based on your demographics
• Pool the resources of the NLST, I-ELCAP, or other international studies
• This will help you develop a protocol that will provide patients the maximum benefits from screening with the lowest possible risks
• When the NCCN guidelines are established, criteria within your screening program can be adjusted accordingly
St. Joseph Hospital (SJH) Criteria
• TOP criteria is similar to the I-ECLAP protocol:– Patient must be ≥50 years of age– Smoked for ≥20 years– Patients should be asymptomatic– Have a PCP– Have a PCP in Orange County
Data Capture
• Absolutely necessary• Develop a CT screening access database • Need administrative assistance• Letters are generated at 3, 6, or 12 months, as
recommended by the radiologist• Follow up for 2 years
CT Screening Access Database
Marketing• Develop screening brochures/referral pads• See 100 PCPs within first year • Educate on importance of early diagnosis for
lung cancer and smoking cessation• Offer your services– Call with suspicious nodule– Put them at ease on issue of care
• Advertise your TOP program– Emphasize: “We want to find lung cancer early;
when it is treatable and possibly curable”
SJH Retrospective Review
• 526 patients screened from November 2004 through 2008; 3% were diagnosed with cancer
• 458 patients had abnormal lung findings; 3.5% diagnosed with cancer
• 16 cancers were identified; 13 were lung primaries and 3 non-lung (B-cell lymphoma, liposarcoma, and metastatic melanoma)
SJH Retrospective Review
• Of the 13 primary lung cancers identified by screening:– 77% (10) were stage IA – 17% (2) were stage III – 8% (1) were stage IV– Over 75% were early-stage lung cancer, treated
with surgical resection and potential cure
Challenges
• Patient compliance to repeat scans at 3, 6, or 12 months
• Implement interventional tactics to encourage patient compliance
• Strategic planning should include expansion and flexibility
• Ability to modify screening programs as evidence points toward national screening guidelines
Screening and Prevention Go Hand-in-Hand
Smoking Cessation
• A cancer diagnosis provides an important window of opportunity for promoting tobacco cessation
Why Promote Cessation?
• A large proportion of cancer patients are current or former smokers at the time of diagnosis
• Prevalence of ever smoking is highest among patients with tobacco-related cancers
• 20% to 50% of patients with cancer continue to smoke after diagnosis
• By not addressing the issue, it sends the message, “It’s too late” or “I don’t care”
Further Reasons to Promote Cessation
• Smoking negatively impacts cancer treatment response– Surgery– Radiation– Chemotherapy
• Increases odds for development of second primary tumors
• Negatively impacts survival outcomes• Reduces quality of life
Develop a Smoking Cessation Program
• Obtain a Tobacco Treatment Specialist (TTS) certification: http://ndc.mayo.edu
• Develop curriculum: Mayo Clinic and Rx for Change (UCSF)
• Purchase CO monitor• Resources:– www.rxforchange.com– www.becomeanex.org – www.testbreath.com
Classes• Initial consultation with the Tobacco
Treatment Specialist (45-60 minutes)• Follow up at 1, 3, and 6 months
through e-mail• Billed as “incident to”: ICD-9 code 305.1 – Tobacco Use Disorder, CPT code 99407
• Tobacco behavior change >10 minutes • 5 weekly group classes (2 hours each) - free• Develop an Excel database to keep statistics,
such as cessation method, quit rate at 1, 3, and 6 months
References• Brenner D.J., Elliston C.D. (2004), Estimated radiation risks potentially associated with full-body
CT screening. Radiology, 232:735-8. • Diederich S, Lenzen H., (2000). Radiation exposure associated with imaging of the chest:
comparison of different radiographic, and computed tomography techniques,. Cancer. 2000;89:2457-60.
• Fleischner Society Guidelines: Radiology 2005 Nov; 237:395-400• Henschke C.I., Yankelevitz D.F., Altorki N.K. (2007); The role of ct screening for lung cancer.
J.thorsurg.2007.03.004(141) • Ganti A.K.,(2006);Lung cancer screening..The Oncologist.2006.11 (5) 487• MacMahon, H., et al., Guidelines for management of small pulmonary nodules detected on CT
scans; A statement from the Fleischner Society. Radiology 2005; 237: 395-400• NLST research team, Reduced lung cancer mortality with low-dose computed tomographic
screening. NEJM 2011; 10.1056; 13. • NLST research team, Reduced lung cancer mortality with low-dose computed tomographic
screening. NEJM 2011; 10.1056; 9-10.• NLST research team, Reduced lung cancer mortality with low-dose computed tomographic
screening. NEJM 2011; 10.1056; 11.• NLST research team, Reduced lung cancer mortality with low-dose computed tomographic
screening. NEJM 2011; 10.1056; 1 • Park E.R. et al., Risk perceptions among participants undergoing lung cancer screening: baseline
results from the national lung screening trial. ANN Behav Med 2009; 37 (3): 268-279.
Lung Cancer Case Discussion
Karen Overmeyer, MS, RN, ANPThoracic Oncology Nurse Navigator
Henrico Doctors’ HospitalCancer Center Specialty Clinics
Richmond, Virginia
Cancer Center Specialty Clinics at Henrico Doctors’ Hospital
Objectives
• Identify 3 risk factors for NSCL cancer.• Discuss the implications of molecular studies in
treatment planning.• Define the difference in prognostic biomarkers
v.s. predictive biomarkers.• Describe the Nurse Navigator role in the delivery
of care to the thoracic oncology patient.• Discuss the advantages of multidisciplinary care
for the lung cancer patient.
Overview of Lung Cancer Today
• Leading cause of cancer worldwide.• > 170,00 death in the U.S.• More deaths than breast, colorectal, and prostate
combined.• 5-yr survival rate for all NSCL stages combined
16%.• 5-yr survival rates of unresectable disease in
stages IIIB and IV: < 5%
American Cancer Society: Cancer Facts & Figures 2010
Classifications
Case Studies
• 65 year old African American, male, smoker.
• 45 year old, Caucasian, female, non-smoker.
Case Study #1
• Joe• 65 y/o • African American, married, brick mason.• PS = O• 40 pack year smoking history, hypertension well
controlled, prostate cancer 2008 with post brachytherapy PSA of 0.5 (ng/ml)
• Presented to PCP w/ bacterial pneumonia visible on CXR w/ dense consolidation RLL.
• Symptoms do not totally resolve with antibiotics.• Repeat CXR 8 weeks later residual opacity.
Case Study #1
• CT scan demonstrates a 4 cm spiculated mass in RLL plus enlarged right hilar lymphnodes.
RadioGraphics July 2000 vol. 20 no. 4 1182-1185
TNM Staging – 7th edition
Staging for Lung Cancer
• What is Joe’s clinical stage? ____________• What is the next step?________________
– PET– Bronchoscopy– Mediastinoscopy– EBUS– CT guided biopsy– Right lower lobectomy
• Notes: _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Chest Tumor Multidisciplinary Clinic• Provides a team approach with disease specific
specialists meeting together at one place and time to decide on a comprehensive treatment plan.
• Goal is to expedite the pathway from suspicion to diagnosis, & diagnosis to treatment, and through survivorship or palliative/hospice while collaborating with PCPs and all involved clinicians.
• Patient and family remain at the helm of decision-making.
• Visit to discuss options for further treatment, or proceed on to further testing and come to MDC for diagnosis & treatment planning.
History & Physical Exam
• Review of Systems:– HTN well controlled on valsartran /hydrochlorthiazide
160/12.5 No hx of MI or notable CAD.– ASA 80mg daily, MVI, Vitamin E– Colonoscopy age 55, 2 benign polyps– Prostate cancer, annual PSA & exam– Denies fever, chills, night-sweats, but admits to
intermittent cough, feeling “more winded” , c/o low level fatigue and 3-6# weight loss over the past 4 months. Denies GI, GU, MS, Neuro changes no headaches, visual changes, changes in mentation, falls, lightheadedness.
Physical Exam & Psychosocial
• Ambulatory, appears well-nourished, oriented, accompanied by wife.
• Physical exam: • HEENT unremarkable, good dentition. • BP 150/88 P82 R20 T98 Ht: 5’ 8” ECOG:0 Pain:0/10• Pulse Ox: 99%• Lungs clear on left with few rhonchi on the right, no
wheezing. No palpable neck, chest, axillary nodes; no pinpoint tenderness over thorax, bony prominences. Skin, extremities unremarkable for bruising, rashes, edema, other.
• NCCN Distress Screening. Score____
Pathology for Joe
• CT-guided needle biopsy of RLL mass:• Non-small cell lung, adencarcinoma type– Moderately differentiated– Immunostains –differentiate primary lung from
metastatic adenocarcinoma– TTF- 1 (+), CK7 (+) , and CK20 (– )– Chromogranin and synaptophysin are negative.
• Notes: ______________________________________________________________
Case #1 Staging
• Final diagnosis: _____________________• What’s next?_______________________– MRI of brain w/without contrast– PET/CT – Pulmonary Function Studies/Pulmonary Consult.– Cardiology consult.– Tobacco addiction counseling.– Supportive services (follow up of Distress Screening
Tool, PsychoSocioSpiritual, Financial advisor)
Final Staging Results
• PET shows expected FDG avidity in RLL mass with SUV 9. 4, plus 2 right hilar nodes with SUV of 6. Also several mildly positive right and left paratracheal nodes with SUV ranging from 1.5 to 2.8.
• No extra-nodal or distant metastatic sites evident.
• MRI is w/o evidence of metastasis.• PFTs : FEV1 = 2.48 /FVC % = 58% DLCO =70• What is Joe’s final stage?_______________
Treatment Options in NSCL
• Surgical Resection ____________________• Chemotherapy alone___________________• Chemo/Radiation_____________________• Stereotactic (SBRT) ___________________• Radiation alone ______________________• Do nothing!
Joe’s Final Plan of Care
• Chemo Regimen:_____________________• Rationale __________________________________________________________________________________________________
• Radiation: __________________________• Rationale: ______________________________________________________________
Nursing Interventions• Knowledge deficit regarding lung cancer– Support & ongoing teaching throughout treatment.– Assess for depression.– Assessment of treatment related toxicities
• Chemotherapy (nausea/vomiting, oral mucositis, low blood counts, fatigue, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, constipation/diarrhea, anorexia.)
• Radiation – dysphagia, mucositis, pharyngitis, thrush,wt loss, cough increase, skin changes.
– Monitor side-effects of bevacizumab• Hypertension – instruct on home monitoring• Infusion reactions – fluid management• Cardiotoxicity- chest pain, peripheral edema, CHF
Case #2 Patient History
• Eloise• 45 y/o• Caucasian, divorced, no children.• Never-smoker, active lifestyle, no PMH other than
seasonal allergies. PSH: hysterectomy at age 38 for fibroids, no other adult surgeries.
• 3 month hx of cough, rhinitis, slight fatigue and by month 3, cough worse, experiencing slight shortness of breath, chest pressure with coughing.
• PS= O
Incidence in Never-Smokers
• Risk factors:– Environmental (haloethers, asbestos, arsenic, radon,
nickel, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), secondhand smoke)
– Genetic, dietary, association w/ other benign lung disease (pulmonary fibrosis, COPD
• Globally – 15% in men & 53% in women– In Asia, 60-70% of cancers in non-smokers are
women.
CT scan Results -Case Study #2
• CT of chest, abdomen, & pelvis revealed a right upper lobe mass, 1.4cm x 1.4cm extending into the pleura. Right hilar mass 4.5cm x 4.3cm, bulky mediastinal adenopathy measuring 3.3 cm x 2cm x2cm, precarinal and pretracheal nodes measuring 5.1cm x 3.5cm x 3.2 cm.
Staging for Lung Cancer
• What is Eloise’s clinical stage? ____________• What is the next step?__________________
– PET– Bronchoscopy– Mediastinoscopy– EBUS– CT guided biopsy– Surgical resection
• Notes: _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Multidisciplinary Clinic
• ROS negative in all systems except for notable cough and chest discomfort described as tightness all over.
• The patient works for a local government agency, but drives to a satellite office I hr away each day; works out at the gym 3 days a week, maintains healthy diet and annual checkups.
• She is divorced x 8 yrs, has a dog, owns her own home, loves gardening, has a sister who is her support system.
• She is “devastated” and in shock over initial CT findings.• Distress screening:___________
Multidisciplinary Clinic• Physical Exam:• VS: 120/72 P78 R18 T98 Ht: 5’6” Wt: 138# Pain: 0/10 ECOG: 0 Pulse Ox: 98%• Ambulatory, oriented, talkative, well-developed, well-
nourished cauc. Female.• HEENT unremarkable; Chest: Bilateral breath sounds
diminished toward bases bilaterally with intermittent wheeze; cough induced by deep breathing. HRRR, no murmurs, rubs. No palpable head, neck, chest lymphnodes; no areas of tenderness or masses noted. GI: active bowel sounds, flat abd. , no tenderness, masses, pain to palpation. GU deferred. Skin unremarkable, w/o bruises, rashes; no peripheral edema.
A Diagnosis & Next Steps
• Eloise’s path returns as NSCL, type______• Immunohistochemistry_______________• Molecular profiling: __________________
• Chemotherapy + Radiation is planned.
• What therapy would you offer this patient?a) Paclitaxel/carboplatinb) Bevacizumab/pemetrexed/cisplatinc) Gemcitabine/carboplatind) Cisplatin/etoposide
Predictive vs Prognostic Markers• Predictive – indicates therapeutic efficacy• Prognostic – indicates survival independent of
treatment received.
PET & MRI Results
• PET: RUL mass has moderate uptake w/ SUV 2.9. Left upper tracheal node has an SUV of 8.6; midline mediastinal nodes are 14.7; right hilar adenopathy SUV is 25. No focal uptake below the diaphragm.
PET Scan Results
MRI of brain w/ without contrast shows 3 areas of metastasis: right frontal 0.1cm, temporal-occipital lobe
demonstrates two lesions 0.9cm and 0.5cm.
Staging
• Now what is Eloise’s Stage?____________• How does this affect treatment?__________• Eloise was holding out hope for consideration in a
clinical study, but late one evening she has one episode of hemoptysis which she describes as a teaspoonful of blood mixed with sputum. She is seen and evaluated in the ED and discharged home.
• She is disqualified for any clinical studies.• How does hemoptysis change the planned Tx?______• What should our next first step be?__________
Gamma Knife
http://www.harperhutzel.org
Navigator Interventions• Knowledge deficit regarding lung cancer– Support & ongoing teaching throughout treatment.
Patient and family.– Assessment of treatment related toxicities
• Chemotherapy (nausea/vomiting, oral mucositis, low blood counts, fatigue, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, anemia, constipation/diarrhea, anorexia.)
– Monitor side-effects of pemetrexed• Maintain folic acid and B12 levels to reduce
GI/hematologic side effects• -folic acid daily for 5 of 7 days of cycle 1, then daily w/
treatment, and for 21 days post last treatment. B12 one week prior to first cycle, then every 9 weeks thereafter.
Additional Interventions:
• Nurse Navigator promotes ongoing collaboration:– Between care providers, referring physician– Scheduling follow up testing, appointments
• Nutritional assessment.• Counsel regarding long distance driving
– No history of seizures• Energy conserving daily routines
– Delegating or hiring assistance with home and yard maintenance.• Psychosocial and financial support
– LINC (legal information network for cancer) local pro-bono defense for workplace rights.
Effectiveness of Therapy/Maintenance
• Eloise is rescanned good response.• Single agent erlotinib is selected for maintenance.• Which of the following are associated side effects?
a) Paronychiab) Keratoconjunctivitisc) Acneform rashd) Diarrheae) Interstitial lung diseasef) a, c, dg) all of the above
Nursing Interventions
• Potential disruption of skin integrity r/t side effect of tyrosine kinase inhibitor.– Prevent dry skin (adequate hydration, avoid hot baths,
protect skin from the elements/injury).– Thick emollient to face/body 2-3 x/day.– Stay out of the sun; SPF 30 or > sunscreen.– Exercise caution with concomitant medications d/t CYP3A4
inhibitors.– Consider prophylaxis regimen
• Doxycycline, topical hydrocortisone 1%• STEPP trial 50% reduction of grade 2 or > skin toxicities.
EGFR Rash
The Good News – New Directions
• Several days prior to Eloise starting erlotinib, crizotinib is released with FDA approval.– 250mg twice per day – Reduce to 200mg tab twice per day for side effects– Take with or without food– Is a CYP3A pathway drug alterations.– Monthly CBC, liver enzymes, bilirubin
• Monitor for:– Visual disturbance, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea or constipation.– QT interval prolongation– Signs of pneumonitis– Edema
Case #1 revisited
• Joe, 68 y/o African American • Treatment stopped d/t poor tolerance.• Presents with dyspnea, cough 5 mos. s/p completion of
four cycles of chemotherapy & radiation.• Hospitalized during treatment for intractable nausea & for
febrile neutropenia. He has Grade III chemotherapy induced neuropathy.
• What is most appropriate next step?a) Hospice/supportive careb) EGFR inhibitor (erlotinib or gefitinib)c) Docetaxeld) Pemetrexed
Palliative Care: Early Intervention
• Medical care & Palliative care not mutually exclusive• Impact on quality of life and survival• Role of nursing as advocates– Promote early initiation, at diagnosis– Offer patient and family access to resources for
advanced symptom control– Utilize psycho-social-spiritual support as needs, concerns
arise.– Poised to assist with the transition to end of life care so
that it is not a surprise to arrive at that door.
Current & Future Directions
• “Personalized” therapies – expanding opportunities for growth & development– Novel targets in lung cancer– Prognostic vs. predictive biomarkers– Molecular diagnostics and genomics
• Prevention and Intervention– Tobacco in all forms– Environmental controls
References• Dienstmann, D., Martinez, P., Felip, E. (2011). Personalizing therapy with targeted
agents in non-small cell lung cancer. Oncotarget 2011; 2:165 -177. Retreived from: www.impactjournals.com/oncotarget.
• Subramanian J, Govindan R (February 2007). "Lung cancer in never smokers: a review". Journal of Clinical Oncology 25 (5): 561–70. doi:
10.1200/JCO.2006.06.8015. PMID 17290066.• Malloy P, Virani R, Kelly K, Munevar C. Beyond bad news – commmunication skills
of nurses in palliative care. J. Hospice Palliative Nurs. 2010; 12:166 -174.
• VonHoff, D, Stephenson, J, Loesch, D, et. al. (October 28, 2010). Pilot study using molecular profiling of patients’ tumors to find potential targets and select treatments for their refractory cancers. Journal of Clinical Oncology. http://jco.ascopubs.org/cgi/doi/10.1200/JCO.2009.26.5983
• Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology:non-small cell lung cancer. (July 2010). Journal of the Comprehensive Cancer Network. Vol 8, Number 7; pp739-832.
Karen Overmeyer, MS, RN, ANPThoracic Oncology Nurse Navigator
Henrico Doctors HospitalCancer Specialty Clinics