- Am I a candidate for surgery?
- If so, what surgery is best for me (EPP vs. PD)?
- Should I have chemotherapy instead of surgery?
- Should I have chemotherapy AND surgery?
- If so, should I have chemotherapy before or after surgery?
- If chemotherapy, what agents should I receive?
Under typical circumstances, getting reliable answers to these
questions which require input from doctors with specialized knowledge in two disciplines,
surgery and oncology, can be a difficult and time-consuming process. Furthermore,
because of the rarity of the disease, there are many opportunities for misinformation
to de-rail the process.
As part of its Comprehensive Mesothelioma Program, which
brings together doctors from various specialties in a collaborative “team”
approach to treating pleural mesothelioma, UCLA is now offering a weekly multi-disciplinary
clinic to help patients avoid the pit-falls, challenges and delays that are
often encountered in determining a treatment plan.
Common Pit-Falls, Challenges and
Delays
1. "You’re
not a candidate for surgery because the tumor is too diffuse"
Most patients are diagnosed with pleural mesothelioma via a biopsy
performed at a local hospital. The surgeon performing the biopsy is often a
general surgeon and, even if a thoracic surgeon, does not have significant
experience in the diagnosis or treatment of mesothelioma. There are many
instances where the surgeon performing the biopsy advises the patient that he
or she is not a candidate for surgery because the tumor is too diffuse or has
spread over most of the lung. As a result, the patient is referred only to an
oncologist and is presented with chemotherapy as the only treatment option.
A similar result occurs where a pulmonologist or oncologist
with limited experience treating mesothelioma reviews a CT scan revealing tumor
that has spread over most of the lung and determines that the patient is not a
candidate for surgery.
Doctors who specialize in the treatment of pleural mesothelioma
will explain that mesothelioma is, by its very nature, a diffuse tumor which
spreads throughout the thin pleural lining that surrounds the lung. Most
surgeons who specialize in treating the disease will conclude that a person is
a candidate for surgery so long as the tumor remains confined to the pleural
space (i.e. it has not invaded the lung or the chest wall), even though it is covering much of the lung.
2. "Reflex" Response: Alimta/Cisplatin Chemotherapy
In 2004, the FDA approved pemetrexed (Alimta) in combination with
Cisplatin for the treatment of pleural mesothelioma. Alimta/Cisplatin remains
the only FDA approved chemotherapy drug combination for the treatment of
mesothelioma. As a result, many general oncologists that are not experienced in
treating mesothelioma reflexively prescribe Alimta/Cisplatin without informing
patients about other treatment options.
Doctors more experienced in treating mesothelioma are aware that:
a) the FDA’s approval of Alimta/Cisplatin was limited to “use with patients
who are not eligible for surgery”, b) in pre-approval trials Alimta/Cisplatin
showed only a 41% partial response rate and an increased median survival rate
of only 2.8 months, with the best results seen in patients with epithelial
cell-type, and c) more recent published trial data reveals that a combination
of surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy is almost always associated with the
longest survival times.
Alimta/Cisplatin is administered once every three weeks for a total of six rounds. With follow-up CT-scans, the treatment process typically lasts approximately six months. With the limited response and increased survival rates, many physicians believe that this is too much time to “invest” in this particular treatment when other treatment options are available for treating this aggressive disease.
Alimta/Cisplatin is administered once every three weeks for a total of six rounds. With follow-up CT-scans, the treatment process typically lasts approximately six months. With the limited response and increased survival rates, many physicians believe that this is too much time to “invest” in this particular treatment when other treatment options are available for treating this aggressive disease.
3. "Tic-Toc" and "Can we talk?"
Even if a patient is fortunate enough to work with knowledgeable
doctors who are willing to consider a full range of available non-surgical and
surgical treatments, the mere act of seeing doctors from the various specialties
can be extremely time-consuming.
Doctors, especially specialists, are very busy and it often takes
many weeks to get an appointment. Furthermore, most experienced mesothelioma
specialists will want to review all medical records and radiology scans before
recommending a treatment. Some will even want to have the biopsy pathology
slides re-tested by pathologists they trust in order to get an accurate read on
the specific cell-type of the tumor. The burden of collecting and transmitting
all of these materials frequently falls on the patient and the patient’s
family.
The process of preparing for and seeing various specialists can
easily take a couple of months to complete and often results in different
opinions and recommendations regarding treatment. For example, an oncologist
recommending chemotherapy and a surgeon recommending surgery. While the
oncologist and surgeon may be in communication with the pulmonologist or
internist that referred the patient, the oncologist and surgeon frequently
don’t speak directly to each other. Accordingly, the patient is left to make a
very important medical decision in a relative “vacuum.”
Furthermore, once a decision is made and the patient proceeds with
the chosen treatment, the specialist’s involvement typically ends once the
treatment is completed. The patient then returns to the pulmonologist for the
next step, which is often a referral to another specialist—starting the process all over again!
UCLA’s Multi-Disciplinary Clinic Brings
Patients Together With Expert Surgeon and Oncologist to Make “Team” Decisions
Regarding Treatment
In
furtherance of its team approach to treating mesothelioma, UCLA’s Comprehensive
Mesothelioma Program recently began offering a multi-disciplinary clinic where
patients can meet with both a thoracic surgeon and an oncologist who specialize
in treating pleural mesothelioma.
The multi-disciplinary
clinic is offered Wednesdays at the Pacific Thoracic Surgery office
located at 10780 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 100, in Los Angeles, California.
At the clinic, patients are seen in consultation by thoracic surgeon Dr. Robert B. Cameron and oncologist Dr.Olga Olevsky .
Dr.
Cameron is the director of UCLA’s Comprehensive Mesothelioma Program, chief of
thoracic surgery at the West Los Angeles Veterans’ Administration Medical
Center and Scientific Advisor for The Pacific Meso Center. Dr. Cameron has been treating pleural mesothelioma patients for over 20 years, is the
innovator of the lung-sparing Pleurectomy/Decortication surgical
procedure and is widely recognized as one of the world’s foremost experts in
mesothelioma treatment and research.
Dr.
Olevsky is a board certified oncologist and the oncology specialist of the UCLA
Comprehensive Mesothelioma Program. She is extremely knowledgeable about the various
chemotherapy agents which are producing the best results for epithelial,
sarcomatoid and bi-phasic cell types of mesothelioma.
At the
multi-disciplinary clinic, patients are able to meet with both Dr. Cameron and
Dr. Olevsky who work together to customize a treatment plan based on such
factors such as the patient’s age and condition and tumor cell type, location
and staging. Patients and accompanying family members are welcomed to be part
of a thorough open discussion with Dr. Cameron and Dr. Olevsky regarding surgical
and chemotherapy options, as well as other treatments such as radiation,
cryoablation and immunotherapy offered by the UCLA Comprehensive Mesothelioma
Program. The goal is, of course, to take the guesswork and frustration out of a
very complex decision making process.
For
patients who decide to proceed with the treatment recommended by Dr. Cameron
and Dr. Olevsky, both doctors will continue to supervise all aspects of
treatment from that point forward. Patients are closely monitored with
follow-up examinations every three months and are referred as necessary to
other specialists that are part of the Comprehensive Mesothelioma Program.
The patient-centered
approach to care provided by UCLA’s multi-disciplinary clinic is aimed to save
patients time and anxiety in making informed decisions about mesothelioma
treatment, allowing them to proceed with treatment as early as possible and focus on getting well.
For
more information about the multi-disciplinary clinic, contact Nurse Savannah
Cline of the Pacific Meso Center at (310) 478-4678 or scline@phlbi.org.
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