Toward improved outcomes for patients with lung cancer globally: The essential role of radiology and nuclear medicine Review


Authors: Lette, M. N. M.; Paez, D.; Shulman, L. N.; Guckenberger, M.; Douillard, J. Y.; Oyen, W. J. G.; Giammarile, F.; Rangarajan, V.; Ginsberg, M.; Pellet, O.; Liao, Z.; Wahab, M. A.
Review Title: Toward improved outcomes for patients with lung cancer globally: The essential role of radiology and nuclear medicine
Abstract: PURPOSE Key to achieving better population-based outcomes for patients with lung cancer is the improvement of medical imaging and nuclear medicine infrastructure globally. This paper aims to outline why and spark relevant health systems strengthening. METHODS The paper synthesizes the global lung cancer landscape, imaging referral guidelines (including resource-stratified ones), the reliance of TNM staging upon imaging, relevant multinational health technology assessments, and precisely how treatment selection and in turn patient outcomes hinge upon imaging findings. The final discussion presents data on current global gaps in both diagnostics (including imaging) and therapies and how, informed by such data, improved population-based outcomes are tangible through strategic planning. RESULTS Imaging findings are central to appropriate lung cancer patient management and can variably lead to life-prolonging interventions and/or to life-enhancing palliative measures. Early-stage lung cancer can be treated with curative intent but, unfortunately, most patients with lung cancer still present at advanced stages and many patients lack access to both diagnostics and therapies. Furthermore, half of lung cancer cases occur in low- and middle-income countries. The role of medical imaging and nuclear medicine in lung cancer management, as outlined herein, may help inform strategic planning. CONCLUSION Lung cancer is the number one cancer killer worldwide. The essential role that medical imaging and nuclear medicine play in early diagnosis and disease staging cannot be overstated, pivotal in selecting the many patients for whom measurably improved outcomes are attainable. Prevention synergized with patient-centered, compassionate, high-quality lung cancer management provision mandate that strategic population-based planning, including universal health coverage strategies, should extend well beyond the scope of disease prevention to include both curative and noncurative treatment options for the millions afflicted with lung cancer. (C) 2022 by American Society of Clinical Oncology
Keywords: mortality; classification; diagnosis; metastases; pet; guidelines; postoperative radiotherapy; stage; positron-emission-tomography; metaanalysis; tnm
Journal Title: JCO Global Oncology
Volume: 8
ISSN: 2687-8941
Publisher: American Society of Clinical Oncology  
Date Published: 2022-06-01
Start Page: e2100100
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000814290100001
DOI: 10.1200/go.21.00100
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC9225682
PUBMED: 35649215
Notes: Review -- Source: Wos
Altmetric
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Michelle S Ginsberg
    224 Ginsberg