Purpose: To evaluate the therapeutic effectiveness of a combined chemoradiotherapy program, followed by surgery in selected cases, in Stage III non-small cell lung cancer.
Methods and materials: Between August 1988 and February 1990, 43 patients Staged IIIa-b (UICC 1987, 58% IIIb) have been treated with concomitant chemotherapy (cisplatin 15 mg/m2 and VP16 75 mg/m2, 5 days a week on week 1 and 5) and radiotherapy (40 Gy split course, 2 Gy/day on week 1, 2, 5, and 6), followed by attempted curative thoracotomy or more cycles of full dose chemotherapy with the same two drugs.
Results: Planned chemoradiotherapy has been given to 91% of patients; 13/43 patients have been operated, with 12 complete resections and three (7%) pathological complete responses. Toxicity was significant, with two postoperative deaths and two fatal radiation pneumonitis. Crude progression-free survival rate is 21% at 30 months, with nine patients (21%) alive and free from progression at follow-up times ranging from 31 to 49 months. Subset survival analysis showed a possibly greater therapeutic effect for non-squamous histology as compared to squamous carcinoma.
Conclusion: These results are encouraging in a cohort of patients with quite advanced disease (58% Stage IIIb).