Drug Resistance Updates
Volume 1, Issue 6 , Pages 377-388, 1998

Anti-growth factor therapy for lung cancer

  • Daniel C. Chan

      Affiliations

    • Lung Cancer Program and Department of Medicine, University of Colorado Cancer Center, Denver, CO, USA
    • Carcinex Inc., Boulder, CO, USA
  • ,
  • Mark Geraci

      Affiliations

    • Lung Cancer Program and Department of Medicine, University of Colorado Cancer Center, Denver, CO, USA
  • ,
  • Paul A Bunn Jr

      Affiliations

    • Lung Cancer Program and Department of Medicine, University of Colorado Cancer Center, Denver, CO, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence to: Paul A Bunn Jr MD, University of Colorado Cancer Center, Box B188, 4200 E 9th Ave, Denver, CO 80262, USA. Tel: 303-315-3007, Fax: 303-315-3004

Received 31 August 1998; received in revised form 9 October 1998; accepted 12 October 1998.

Abstract 

Lung cancers are the leading cause of cancer death in developed countries. In the USA, lung cancer accounts for 29% of all cancer deaths. The cure rate for lung cancer is low (14%) because the cancer spreads early and because chemotherapy cannot cure metastatic disease. In small cell lung cancer (SCLC) two-thirds of patients present with metastatic disease in a distant organ (stage IV). In non-small cell lung cancers (adenocarcinoma, squamous carcinoma, large cell carcinoma) one-third present with metastatic disease. Initial chemotherapy produces high response rates in both SCLC (85%–90% response rate) and NSCLC (50% response rate) but response duration is short and drug resistance develops rapidly. Growth factors play an important role in the pathogenesis and the progression of lung cancers. Knowledge of the role of these growth factors, their receptors and their signal pathways has produced new therapeutic targets. Compounds developed toward these targets have completed preclinical testing and are now in clinical trials. Some of these compounds are active in both drug sensitive and drug resistant lung cancers. They also produce synergistic growth inhibition when combined with cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents. Thus, these compounds may provide a new way to overcome drug resistance in lung cancer.

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PII: S1368-7646(98)80013-7

Drug Resistance Updates
Volume 1, Issue 6 , Pages 377-388, 1998