The place of bronchoscopic photodynamic therapy in advanced unresectable lung cancer: experience of 100 cases1

Abstract
Objectives: The objectives of the study were: (1) to evaluate effectiveness of photodynamic therapy (PDT) for symptom palliation in patients with inoperable lung cancer; (2) to determine survival benefit in a subset of patients. Methods: One hundred patients, 68 male, 32 female, aged 44–81 years (mean 62.5) with advanced inoperable bronchogenic cancer and endobronchial luminal obstruction were prospectively studied. Eighty-two percent had previous chemo/radiotherapy. The pre-treatment protocol consisted of: clinical, radiological and bronchoscopic examination, pulmonary function testing, assessment of WHO performance status and clinical staging. Treatment protocol was: intravenous injection of 2 mg/kg body weight of photofrin/polyhaematoporphyrin and interstitial illumination using 630 nm laser light 24–72 h later. Follow-up was at 6–8 weeks for 1 year. Then every 3–6 months if applicable. Repeat PDT as necessary. Results: All patients were stage IIIa–IV. The histology of the tumour was: non small cell in 90 and small cell in 10. There was no treatment related mortality. Mean endoluminal obstruction fell from 85.8% to 17.5%, mean forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) improvement was 430 ml and 280 ml, respectively. Ninety patients died from 6 weeks to 37 months, mean and median survival: 9 months and 5 months, respectively. Ten patients are alive from 13 to 72 months, mean 36 months, median 29 months. Overall 2-year survival was 19%. Multivariant analysis indicated that age, sex, histology and stage of disease did not influence survival significantly but performance status did. Patients with WHO2, 6.9 mean and 4 months median survival (log-rank PConclusions: (1) PDT is effective in palliation of inoperable advanced lung cancer. (2) Subset of patients with a better performance status have added survival benefit.