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Nagashree Seetharamu, MD, MBBS, discusses interpreting the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology and deciding when to initiate hospice care in patients with small cell lung cancer.
Nagashree Seetharamu, MD, MBBS, associate program director, Hematology/Oncology Fellowship Program, Northwell Health; associate professor, medicine, Division of Hematology/Medical Oncology, the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell Health, discusses interpreting the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology and deciding when to initiate hospice care in patients with small cell lung cancer (SCLC).
Although the NCCN guidelines provide recommendations for the second-line treatment of patients with SCLC, choosing to retreat patients with platinum-doublet chemotherapy or begin using lurbinectedin (Zepzelca) instead is a decision that depends on individual patient needs and characteristics, Seetharamu says. Many physicians may choose to retreat patients with platinum-doublet chemotherapy before giving lurbinectedin, however, administering lurbinectedin first and then using platinum-doublet chemotherapy in later settings is also an option, Seetharamu notes. If patients have recurred within 6 months of their initial treatment, moving on to another line of therapy with a different mechanism of action or retreating them with previous therapies if they still have a good ECOG performance status (PS) are both strategies that are supported by the NCCN guidelines, Seetharamu explains.
The NCCN guidelines for the management of SCLC, were revised in 2021 to include lurbinectedin as a frontline treatment, Seetharamu says. In contrast, the NCCN guidelines for non–small cell lung cancer are frequently updated to include new treatments, highlighting the need for further research and additional treatments in SCLC, Seetharamu emphasizes.
ECOG PS is 1 of the most important factors to consider when determining whether patients should continue to receive treatment or begin hospice care, Seetharamu says. If a patient’s health has significantly declined and further treatment is not in their best interest, hospice care could be the next step, Seetharamu explains. However, patient preference also plays a crucial role in this decision, as some patients, upon learning the pros and cons of continuing vs discontinuing treatment, choose to decline further treatment. Patient decisions to start hospice care should be honored and take precedence over any available treatments they may be eligible to receive, Seetharamu emphasizes.
Availability of suitable treatments is also a contributing factor in this decision, Seetharamu notes. In the third and subsequent treatment lines, patient characteristics such as organ function and comorbidities affect the therapies patients are fit to receive, Seetharamu concludes.
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