Walder Jeremy R, Faiz Saadia A, Sandoval Marcelo
Divisions of Critical Care, Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine, McGovern Medical School at UTHealth, 6431 Fannin St., Ste. MSB 1.282, Houston, TX 77030 USA.
Department of Pulmonary Medicine, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, 1515 Holcombe Blvd., Unit 1462, Houston, TX 77030 USA.
Emerg Cancer Care. 2023;2(1):3. doi: 10.1186/s44201-023-00018-9. Epub 2023 Mar 6.
Though decreasing in incidence and mortality in the USA, lung cancer remains the deadliest of all cancers. For a significant number of patients, the emergency department (ED) provides the first pivotal step in lung cancer prevention, diagnosis, and management. As screening recommendations and treatments advance, ED providers must stay up-to-date with the latest lung cancer recommendations. The purpose of this review is to identify the many ways that emergency providers may intersect with the disease spectrum of lung cancer and provide an updated array of knowledge regarding detection, management, complications, and interdisciplinary care.
Lung cancer, encompassing 10-12% of cancer-related emergency department visits and a 66% admission rate, is the most fatal malignancy in both men and women. Most patients presenting to the ED have not seen a primary care provider or undergone screening. Ultimately, half of those with a new lung cancer diagnosis in the ED die within 1 year. Incidental findings on computed tomography are mostly benign, but emergency staff must be aware of the factors that make them high risk. Radiologic presentations range from asymptomatic nodules to diffuse metastatic lesions with predominately pulmonary symptoms, and some may present with extra-thoracic manifestations including neurologic. The short-term prognosis for ED lung cancer patients is worse than that of other malignancies. Screening offers new hope through earlier diagnosis but is underutilized which may be due to racial and socioeconomic disparities. New treatments provide optimism but lead to new complications, some long-term. Multidisciplinary care is essential, and emergency medicine is responsible for the disposition of patients to the appropriate specialists at inpatient and outpatient centers.
ED providers are intimately involved in all aspects of lung cancer care. Risk factor modification and referral for lung cancer screening are opportunities to further enhance patient care. In addition, with the advent of newer cancer therapies, ED providers must stay vigilant and up-to-date with all aspects of lung cancer including disparities, staging, symptoms of disease, prognosis, treatment, and therapy-related complications.
尽管在美国肺癌的发病率和死亡率呈下降趋势,但它仍是所有癌症中最致命的。对于相当数量的患者而言,急诊科是肺癌预防、诊断和管理的首个关键环节。随着筛查建议和治疗方法的不断进步,急诊科医护人员必须紧跟最新的肺癌诊疗建议。本综述的目的是确定急诊科医护人员与肺癌疾病谱可能交叉的多种方式,并提供有关肺癌检测、管理、并发症及多学科护理的最新知识。
肺癌占癌症相关急诊科就诊病例的10%-12%,入院率为66%,是男性和女性中最致命的恶性肿瘤。大多数到急诊科就诊的患者此前未看过初级保健医生,也未接受过筛查。最终,在急诊科被新诊断出肺癌的患者中有一半在1年内死亡。计算机断层扫描的偶然发现大多为良性,但急诊工作人员必须了解使其具有高风险的因素。影像学表现范围从无症状结节到以肺部症状为主的弥漫性转移性病变,有些可能伴有包括神经系统症状在内的胸外表现。急诊科肺癌患者的短期预后比其他恶性肿瘤更差。筛查通过早期诊断带来了新希望,但未得到充分利用,这可能是由于种族和社会经济差异所致。新的治疗方法带来了希望,但也导致了一些新的并发症,有些是长期的。多学科护理至关重要,急诊医学负责将患者转诊至住院和门诊中心的合适专科医生处。
急诊科医护人员密切参与肺癌护理的各个方面。改变危险因素并推荐进行肺癌筛查是进一步改善患者护理的机会。此外,随着更新的癌症治疗方法的出现,急诊科医护人员必须对肺癌的各个方面保持警惕并与时俱进,包括差异、分期、疾病症状、预后、治疗及治疗相关并发症。