ANNOUNCER: New therapies are prolonging the lives of patients with lung cancer and improving their quality of life.
JACK WEST, MD: There is still a lot of pessimism among patients and even among other doctors about the value of giving treatment to patients with lung cancer. Some are skeptical that we can improve cure rates and some people who we can't cure, there is a perception that it's not worth bothering with treatment.
What we have done in the last ten years and especially in the last five years is develop treatments that, in a curative setting, can improve the cure rates and, in the non-curative setting, can improve survival or, if keeping the same survival, can do that with fewer side effects for patients.
LUIS RAEZ, MD: The chemotherapy that we use nowadays, the patient can go to work, try to have his life as normal as possible. The chemotherapy is outpatient, so you come to the center, you get your chemotherapy, and hopefully the rest of the week you are not sick.
JORGE E. GOMEZ, MD: The most important thing to remember is that we have many drugs for lung cancer. Some of those include the basic drug, which is cisplatin, in combination with other drugs such as Taxotere, paclitaxel, gemcitabine, pemetrexed. There are multiple other drugs that can be used.
LUIS RAEZ, MD: The problem with chemotherapy and the mechanism of action is they damage the DNA of the cancer cell, but they also damage your healthy cells.
ANNOUNCER: And many of the side effects seen with chemotherapy stem from this collateral damage done to healthy cells. So in addition to traditional chemotherapies, doctors are also treating patients with newer targeted therapies.
JORGE E. GOMEZ, MD: We've been trying to target the actual cause of the cancer. The actual metabolic or biological mechanisms that force the cell to become malignant in an effort to reverse that process.
HOWARD WEST, MD: There are intelligently designed treatments that we have that are specifically focusing on a particular molecule on a cancer cell that is not shared on many of the cells of the body. And the idea is that a targeted therapy can hit the cancer with fewer side effects for a patient.
ANNOUNCER: Tarceva is such a newly approved targeted drug.