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The medical community has made significant progress in understanding that lung cancer is not a single cancer, and are treating it accordingly. We’ve stopped carpet bombing the body and have started using targeted weaponry to assassinate some forms of cancer. As a result, some patients are alive now, over a decade after being diagnosed with metastatic lung disease.
We can credit much of that progress to research into three specific mutations that drive distinctive forms of lung cancer. Instead of treating patients with these different mutations the same, we now give them individualized treatments that work differently based on their cancer’s mutation.
If you or someone you know is diagnosed with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), there are three major subtypes the cancer should be tested for:
It is hard to overstate the awesomeness of these breakthroughs.
Around the world, a diagnosis of lung cancer leads to more cancer-related deaths than those from breast cancer, colorectal cancer, prostate cancer, and pancreas cancer combined. Yet for a growing number of distinct molecular subtypes of this disease, even advanced lung cancer can now be a controllable disease. Beyond the three subtypes described above, many other different mutations and genetic changes which could allow lung cancer therapy to be personalized are receiving testing in clinical trials. Most recently, the advent of immunotherapy – using drugs to stimulate the body’s own immune system to attack the lung cancer – has also shown promise, and how these two areas – personalized medicine and immunotherapy - will overlap and interact represent some of the major research directions for the future.
So, this is great news, right? Oncologists throughout the country are testing their patients’ tumors, and people are living longing and better than they could have ever imagined, yes?
No.
Despite all of this great news, many NSCLC patients do not get their tumors tested for ALK, ROS1, or EGFR mutations. Improving these numbers falls to the patients or their caregivers to educate themselves and advocate for molecular testing.
Fortunately, organizations like the Global Resource for Advancing Cancer Education (GRACE) exist solely to help patients become shared decision makers when it comes to their cancer care.
GRACE is working with the University of Colorado Cancer Center in Aurora to hold a patient event on Aug. 20th for those living with ALK, ROS1, or EGFR mutant lung cancers. The organizers have already solicited questions in advance from patients in the internet lung cancer community.
The Targeted Therapies in Lung Cancer Patient Forum is open to patients and their caregivers. Renowned lung cancer experts from around the U.S. will present, and patients who are living with lung cancer will serve as moderators of the discussions that take place between the doctors and the audience.
The morning sessions will help attendees understand their mutation, learn of open clinical trials, and hear about treatment options;.all to help patients develop their plans A, B, C, and D. The afternoon will focus on survivorship in all its aspects, from finances to sex, to diet, to exercise – how to live life to the fullest with lung cancer.
Please feel free to offer comments and raise questions in our
discussion forums.
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.
Hello Natalieaster, Welcome to Grace. I hope your stay with us is short, but we are always here to answer, listen and share.
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