The lungs are complex organs; they lie on either side of your heart and fill the inside of your chest. In an adult, each lung on average weighs about 1lb.
However, the right lung is a little larger than the left because there is more room inside the chest for it. The left lung has to share its space with the heart.
There are two thin layers of tissue, called the pleura covering each lung. These layers - or membranes - slide over each other as you breathe so that the lungs can expand and contract.
Both lungs are made up of lobes - three on the right and two on the left. The lungs are a mass of fine tubes, the smallest of which end in tiny air sacs called the alveoli. There are around 300 million of these alveoli.
These alveoli have very thin walls. They are combined with the finest of blood vessels called capillaries.
The lungs are protected by the rib cage, between the ribs are muscles that are essential for breathing. Below the lungs is your diaphragm. The diaphragm separates the chest from the abdomen and is also involved in breathing.
Surgical resection is considered the best treatment when feasible in early-stage disease.
Unfortunately, only 20 to 25% of patients can have an operation following a diagnosis of lung cancer, the majority of patients being diagnosed with inoperable cancer (spread) or being not fit for an operation.
When surgery is not feasible, the cancer can be treated by radiotherapy (external beam radiation), systemic therapy (chemotherapy and other drugs given orally or intravenously at regular intervals) or both.
Lung metastases (secondary cancer in the lung) are not uncommon in colon carcinoma, renal cell carcinoma, malignant melanoma (skin cancer), breast carcinoma and sarcomas. In selected cases, lung metastases can be removed surgically.
New treatment modalities are available (radiofrequency ablation and cyberknife radiosurgery) in selected cases.
All tumours have to be staged before a final treatment plan can be agreed. This means measuring the tumour, defining its exact position and relation to other thoracic structures or organs and to find out if the tumour has spread into the regional lymph nodes or into other organs such as the lung, liver or brain.Staging is performed using scans, which may include CT and PET. Biopsy procedures might also be necessary, including videothoracoscopy (VATS) or mediastinoscopy are the most commonly used diagnostic procedures to obtain tissue from your tumour or lymph nodes if all other techniques have failed to give a precise diagnosis. Most of these diagnostic procedures can be performed as day-case procedures, or may involve an overnight stay in hospital.
We may also need to assess your lung function, your cardiac function, fitness for surgery and perform some rouotine blood tests.
Following your initial staging, you may be referred directly for an operation (lung resection) or for chemotherapy or/and radiotherapy.
Alternatively, your Consultant may estimate that there is not enough information on your tumour and may want to obtain more tissue or a more accurate diagnosis in order to establish a therapeutic plan.
Surgery is routinely performed as a treatment for primary lung cancer or secondary cancer of the lung (metastases). Surgical procedures involve wedge resections of the lesions, segmentectomy (removal of a segment of the lung, 1/10th of a lung usually), lobectomy (removal of a lobe, 1/3rd to 1 half of a lung), bi-lobectomy (removal of two lobes) or pneumonectomy (removal of the entire lung).
Depending upon the extent and type of disease, surgery usually requires a minimum of four - five days in hospital after a wedge resection or a lobectomy of lung and up to ten days after a pneumonectomy (resection of left or right lung).
Minimally invasive surgery as a lung cancer treatment is routinely performed at London Bridge Hospital. You may be eligible for a VATS (keyhole surgery) wedge resection, VATS segmentectomy (ablation of a segment of your lung) or a VATS lobectomy (removal of a lobe of your lung) depending upon the size and location of the tumour.
The possibility of having a minimally invasive procedure (keyhole surgery) will be discussed with your Consultant. This procedure is appropriate if you have got early stage lung cancer, with a tumour less than 2-3 cm in diameter and no positive lymph nodes as assessed by PET-CT or mediastinoscopy.
In that case, the lung lobe involved will be removed through a 5-6 cm minithoracotomy. This has been shown to cause less post-operative pain than a conventional thoracotomy and the recovery period is shorter. The in-hospital stay is usually three to four days following a VATS lobectomy or segmentectomy.
You may also have to discuss the possibility of having a paravertebral catheter or an epidural catheter for adequate pain relief after your thoracotomy with one of our Consultant Anaesthetists.
Alternatively, you may have advanced stage lung cancer and the operation may involve the resection of a great vessel, diaphragm, or part of the chest wall together with part of your lung. In that case the procedure is considered carefully and discussed with experienced radiologists and oncologists.
At the present time, this kind of procedure is usually performed following a course of induction chemotherapy to reduce the size of the tumour and make it more easily resectible.
We have a high dependency unit (HDU) and an intensive care unit (ICU) supervised by a team of Consultant Critical Care Physicians allowing our team to perform complex cases. Your stay in HDU or ICU will be determined by the extensiveness of your lung resection and your co-morbidities (history of cardiac disease, diabetes, obesity, etc…).
For many patients this is the mainstay of treatment. Chemotherapy is usually administered as an outpatient treatment over three to four months and often consists in a combination of two drugs given intravenously over a few hours. Alternatively, your Consultant may recommend a new drug targeting cancer cell receptors instead of the chemotherapy.
If surgery is planned but the tumour is too large or is involving thoracic organs other than the lung, your Consultant may recommend that you receive some chemotherapy before the operation to help reduce the size of the tumour. Sometimes, radiotherapy is administered along side chemotherapy to shrink the tumour further. This is called induction treatment and this is increasingly used to make inoperable tumours operable.
Alternatively, your Consultant may recommend that you receive chemotherapy following your operation. This treatment is usually started six - eight weeks after surgery and is called adjuvant chemotherapy. This cancer treatment is normally recommended to reduce the risk of cancer relapse.
This treatment is recommended when the tumour is large, when the thoracic lymph nodes are involved by the cancer, or when other thoracic organs are involved.
Radiotherapy may be used to treat a lung tumour when surgery is not possible due to high risk or multiple other medical problems. This treatment is usually administered over a few days or weeks depending on the location of the tumour and dose planned by your Consultant. Often it is combined with chemotherapy, either at the same time (concurrently) or one after the other (sequentially).
There are different ways to administer radiotherapy and new techniques and advances in this field can now minimise the collateral damage to organs surrounding the tumour.
Radiotherapy is rarely used before surgery. It is sometimes used following the operation (six - eight weeks after) when the risk of local relapse is particularly high. Alternatively it is useful to treat symptoms such as cough and pain, and may be targeted at areas of cancer spread (such as bones) as well as the lung.
Radiofrequency Ablation and Cyberknife Stereotactic Radiosurgery as a Lung Cancer Treatment.
CT-guided radiofrequency ablation (RFA) and Cyberknife stereotactic radiosurgery are new minimally invasive image-guided technologies available for patients who cannot have surgery due to severe co-morbidities or poor lung function.
These techniques are safe and their role is currently evaluated in the treatment of early stage lung cancer and solitary lung metastases and in patients who are not fit for surgical resection.
Your treatment would be discussed and delivered by a team involving a Consultant Radiologist, a Clinical Oncologist and a Thoracic Surgeon. Treatment planning is mapped out on a computer with the aid of a PET-CT fusion scan to outline the tumour that is to be targeted.
If cyberknife treatment is the chosen treatment method, this is offered at The Harley Street Clinic.
RFA is mainly used to treat small lung tumours ( < 3cm ) or pulmonary metastases. This is always done under general anaesthetic in the interventional radiology suite. The procedure is performed by an Interventional Radiologist, with a Thoracic Surgeon attending
The landscape of thoracic oncology is changing. At present the treatment of specific tumours such as lung cancer is based on large clinical trials (thousands of patients) and the rule is of “one size fits all” with all patients with a similar cancer type receiving the same drug is changing rapidly.
Gene expression, profiling, genotyping and biomarkers are progressively becoming an essential step in the analysis of thoracic cancers. In the past 10 years, new drugs have been developed to target specific gene mutations and have transformed the prognosis of lung cancer and other thoracic cancers.
Once a diagnosis of lung cancer, malignant mesothelioma, tymoma or any other thoracic cancer has been made, it is essential to find out which genetic abnormalities cause the cell to grow uncontrollably. In lung cancer, genes such as EGFR and ALK are routinely tested in many patients.
No matter whether you have early-stage or advanced-stage lung cancer, the tissue analysis will help your doctors decide which treatment is best for you.
For further more details, Contact Dr.S.Ayyappan has a best experience in Lung cancer surgery at Kumaran hospital in Kilpauk, Chennai.
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