Neoadjuvant therapy in lung cancer: What is most important: Objective response rate or major pathological response?

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Abstract

Lung cancer is the most fatal and frequently diagnosed malignant tumor. Neoadjuvant therapy is a promising approach for prolonging survival and increasing the chance of cure rates for patients with potentially resectable disease. Currently, many therapeutic alternatives, including chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy, are continually being explored to enrich the content of neoadjuvant therapy. However, neoadjuvant therapy remains to have no unified evaluation standards. Overall survival (OS) is the “gold standard” for evaluating the clinical benefit of cancer treatment, but it needs years for a reliable evaluation. Hence, researchers need to identify surrogate endpoints that can predict OS accurately and reliably without long follow-up periods. In this review, we describe the research progress of different neoadjuvant therapies and explore their response evaluation, aiming to identify stronger predictors of OS.

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Chen, X., & Ma, K. (2021, October 1). Neoadjuvant therapy in lung cancer: What is most important: Objective response rate or major pathological response? Current Oncology. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol28050350

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