J. Stiess et al., SUPERIOR VENA-CAVA SYNDROME (SVCS) IN SMA LL-CELL LUNG-CANCER - A PROGNOSTIC FACTOR, Tumordiagnostik & Therapie, 15(4), 1994, pp. 128-133
One hundred and thirty-three unselected patients with small cell cance
r of the lung were retrospectively analyzed. They were consecutively t
reated between January 1985 and December 1990 in the Department of Rad
iation Oncology of the University of Wuerzburg. An analysis was perfor
med of 25 patients presenting with superior vena cava syndrom (SVCS) i
n comparison to 108 patients without SVCS to answer the following ques
tions: 1. Which are the patients characteristics? 2. What kind of meta
static disease was developed? 3. What kind of treatment did these pati
ents receive and how did they respond to it? 4. What was the prognosis
of these patients? The patients with SVCS were treated as follows: 16
% only by irradiation and 16% only by chemotherapy, and 64% received a
combined radiochemothempy. The median follow-up time was 10.5 months
(0.3 to 77.5 months). The primary tumor was located in the right lung
in 92% of patients with SVCS.48% were staged as ''limited disease''. 5
2% of patients with SVCS had distant disease at primary diagnosis. 64%
developed distant metastasis during the course of disease. The patien
ts characteristics for cases with and without SVCS were quite similar.
90% of the SVCS-patients showed a favorable response to treatment. Th
e kind of treatment influenced the survival time: only patients with c
ombined radiochemotherapy survived longer than 20 months. SVCS is not
an unfavourable prognostic factor: no statistical difference in surviv
al for patients with and without SVCS was noted. We strongly recommend
a combined radiochemotherapy for patients with SVCS.