What You Should Know | Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment and Testing

What therapies are available for small cell lung cancer? Dr. Tejas Patil, a lung cancer specialist and researcher, discusses the common treatment options, important testing to have before choosing therapy, and addresses the critical role that clinical trials may play in small cell lung cancer care. 

Dr. Tejas Patil is an Assistant Professor of Thoracic Oncology at the University of Colorado Cancer Center focused on targeted therapies and novel biomarkers in lung cancer. Learn more about Dr. Patil.

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Transcript:

Jamie: 

What sort of testing should take place before choosing a therapy for small cell lung cancer? 

Dr. Tejas Patil: 

In general, patients will need a diagnosis, they’ll need some kind of biopsy, and then this tissue sample is looked at under a microscope, and a pathologist calls it small cell lung cancer. Then they need scans to establish a clinical stage. This is usually done through a PET CT and an MRI brain. However, small cell lung cancer can be quite aggressive, and a lot of times patients are in the hospital for symptoms directly related to their cancer. In those circumstances, especially when patients are very symptomatic, it can actually be reasonable to start with treatment initially and get scans as soon as possible. 

In certain circumstances, an additional step can be taken, which is called molecular testing. This is not routine for patients with small cell lung cancer. However, if a patient has never smoked in their life, I will frequently get what’s called broad-based molecular testing because a lifelong never-smoker might have certain mutations that allow the use of a different type of treatment called targeted therapy and can also provide information for possible clinical trials in the future.  

Jamie: 

How is small cell lung cancer treated? What are the options for patients? 

Dr. Tejas Patil: 

The mainstay of treatment in 2025 is using chemotherapy. We typically use a combination of platinum chemotherapy. Your doctors might use a drug called cisplatin (Platinol) or carboplatin (Paraplatin). These are platinum chemotherapies, and it’s typically combined with another chemotherapy called etoposide (Etopophos, Toposar). In addition to those treatments, especially if patients have widespread small cell lung cancer, it’s very common to also add an immunotherapy treatment to the chemotherapy.  

These are often given in four cycles, and a cycle is defined as 21 days spaced apart. And after the completion of chemotherapy and immune therapy, the doctors will frequently get repeat scans to see if the treatment has worked or not worked, and then patients will go on a maintenance program where they’re just getting the immunotherapy.  

Advanced Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment Options and Clinical Trials

How is small cell lung cancer research evolving? Dr. Tejas Patil, a researcher and lung cancer specialist, discusses the recent advances in small cell lung cancer treatment, explains the impact of clinical trial participation, and shares why he is hopeful for the future of care. 

Dr. Tejas Patil is an Assistant Professor of Thoracic Oncology at the University of Colorado Cancer Center focused on targeted therapies and novel biomarkers in lung cancer. Learn more about Dr. Patil.

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Transcript:

Jamie: 

And are there emerging treatments that are showing promise for small cell lung cancer care? 

Dr. Tejas Patil: 

There are. So small cell lung cancer has some new treatments, specifically new immunotherapies that are called DLL3 T-cell engagers. The FDA has approved one of these called tarlatamab-dlle (Imdelltra), and there are several clinical trials underway looking at using these new treatments for small cell. We have been a participant in some of the clinical trials involving DLL3-targeted immunotherapy treatments, and the results have been remarkable.  

In general, I’m an advocate that patients with small cell lung cancer participate in clinical trials when possible. Our ability to develop new and groundbreaking treatments is really dependent on collective action.   

Jamie: 

Sure. I know some patients may be hesitant to join a trial. Sometimes that may be something scary. What do you tell patients that may be hesitant to participate?  

Dr. Tejas Patil: 

Clinical trials, in my view, offer the best opportunity for patients to receive cutting-edge treatment. A common question I get as a treating physician is whether I will receive a placebo if I’m on a clinical trial. The short answer is it is unethical to give patients placebo if there is a standard-of-care treatment option available. So, in most cases, patients will either receive the experimental drug, this is called an open-label clinical trial, where both the patient and the doctor know what they’re getting.

Or they might get a double-blind randomized clinical trial, in which case the doctor doesn’t know what the patient’s getting. But what we do know is that the patient will get either the standard of care, whatever that is for the disease state or the standard of care, plus some new treatment. And that is the only ethical way to design clinical trials in the first-line, second-line, or later-line setting. So clinical trials also allow us to advance the field because it allows us to offer treatments that wouldn’t otherwise be available commercially.  

Jamie: 

Dr. Patil, how’s the field of small cell lung cancer care progressing? Are you hopeful?  

Dr. Tejas Patil: 

I’m very hopeful for small cell lung cancer. I think in the last two years, I’ve seen some of the biggest therapeutic advances in this area that I’ve seen for almost 20 years. The DLL3 T-cell bispecifics, these are a new form of immunotherapy, have really been game-changers in small cell lung cancer. There’s a lot of exciting clinical trials in small cell lung cancer.   

It’s a disease that has been very difficult to treat for many years with traditional chemotherapies. And what I’m very excited about is that we are trying to think of newer ways to treat small cell lung cancer. We’re using new immunotherapies, there’s going to be radio ligand therapy in the future. There’s novel molecular profiling of small cell that’s helping us figure out which types of subsets of small cell might be better suited to different types of therapies. And I also want to emphasize that the other big advance in small cell lung cancer has been lung cancer screening. We are actually catching small cell at an earlier and earlier stage, which makes it even more likely for us to cure small cell lung cancer.  

Enhancing Collaborative Decision-Making in Small Cell Lung Cancer Care

How can multidisciplinary care teams optimize collaborative decision-making in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) management? Dr. Jacob Sands of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute discusses the pivotal role of nurse practitioners, social workers, nurse navigators, and other supportive care team members in creating a seamless, patient-centered care experience.

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

You’ve talked about collaborative decision-making. You have clearly highlighted how you all collaborate at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the importance of having these multiple visits. What about other members of the care team? How do you utilize social workers or patient navigators or other members in fostering collaborative decision-making in small cell lung cancer care?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Well, they’re instrumental. I mean, this really is a shared team approach. Ms. McDonald and I are at the core of that. But then around us, the social worker, really important. You know, rides can often be a real barrier to getting care. And so having a social worker involved in that, that’s one aspect that’s kind of a more obvious one. Even the emotional support as well, and logistics, drug availability and programs for assisted pay, all of these types of things. We have whole teams that help with that. Nurse navigator is another core member, though.

We meet weekly with an administrative support and administrative assistant and with a nurse navigator to go over any patients that are complex and say, okay, this is what’s going on. How can we assist them better? What’s coming up? The administrative assistant knowing, oh, this person’s going to get a scan next week, but then is coming in the next day, we need those results available. Sometimes the outside hospital hasn’t even read the scan yet. They don’t have a radiology report. But we’ll review it with our radiologist as well. Because we have that scan available now. We’ll often do scans the same day.

Patients will come in, they’ll get a scan and then they come right to clinic. And we will review the scan with our radiologist. But of course, radiology, thoracic surgery, radiation, oncology, you know, the whole multidisciplinary team is a part of that. But there are also all of these other supportive members of that team and these weekly meetings, Ms. McDonald really was at the heart of that process and saying, hey, you’ve had these complicated patients. Let’s pull together a team meeting. That has been a gift.

That’s been wonderful, because then weekly we go through this and then everything is organized, and it really reduces the number of other emails or things that could potentially slip through the cracks in the process. Now, on top of that, if you go to tarlatamab, which is an inpatient dosing, which we just don’t have that in small cell lung cancer up to this point as something that requires inpatient monitoring. And as McDonald has really been part of that core of then connecting across to the inpatient team as well, and to all the nurses to then make sure we’re all on the same page.

A colleague of ours, Dr. Rotow, who’s our clinical director, of course, was quite instrumental in the implementation of these things as well. Just to say it goes out beyond our team, specifically in the small cell space. But it’s really important to be connected in all of these ways that really helps provide patients with all the resources that are available to them as well.


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Helping Patients Navigate SCLC Treatment: Tools, Transparency, and Supportive Care

Dr. Jacob Sands and Nurse Practitioner Stephanie McDonald both of Dana Farber Cancer Institute discuss the complexities of treatment decision-making for small cell lung cancer, exploring how providers can help patients navigate overwhelming options.The panel discusses practical tools for educating patients about side effects, the crucial role of palliative care, and why early support can dramatically improve both quality of life and outcomes. 

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

So, Ms. McDonald, I want to go to you, because Dr. Sands just described some very exciting treatments with very promising results. And I can only imagine that this information, while great, is also overwhelming to patients when they’re presented with all of these options? So are there specific decision aids or tools that you use when you’re talking with patients and families to help them understand the risks and the benefits of the different treatment options as they’re making decisions?

Stephanie McDonald:

So, yes, there are a lot of different treatment options. And with that, you know, we need to be aware of the potential toxicity associated with the treatment that patients are getting, which don’t come without risks. Right. Most patients do pretty well on immunotherapy, but there definitely are toxicities, you know, as far as, like, colitis or pneumonitis and rashes. There are things that are going to be education points that need to be made with patients to know what to look out for depending on what treatment they’re getting.

So I think it is incredibly important not only to provide education sheets to patients to reinforce these discussions, but like I spoke to earlier, I have a separate visit with the patients to be able to spend at least an hour the first time they are given a treatment plan, to be able to feed through all of the potential side effects. And I don’t want to overwhelm patients because you could be a bad, you know, commercial going over every single side effect. But we do need to be realistic with patients about what to be on the lookout for, what might come up, when to call if something does occur.

So I think the most important thing is breaking it down for patients to really easy-to-understand information and you can really gauge. I prefer to see patients in-person or at least have a virtual encounter with them over like a telephone encounter, because you can really gauge how a person might be responding to what you’re teaching them.If someone’s a deer in headlights and they’re overwhelmed by the information that you’re sharing, you need to be able to stop, take a few steps back, and break it down to easy-to-understand information for not only them but for their family members.

I think it’s really important that we also care for the family member as well. IWhen you walk into the room, you’re not just taking care of the patient, you’re taking care of every single person that is in their life. Like they have supportive families who are coming to these appointments who are equally as overwhelmed, or maybe there’s a shift in their role. And now that maybe somebody was a primary caretaker, very active and matriarch, or a patriarch in the household, and now there’s a shift in a whole role and dynamic for how these patients are going forward along their journey.

So we need to be able to spend time to unpack all of that to really understand how we can best support these patients. So besides just education tools, which I think just help reinforce the information that we go over with them as far as breaking down what are the side effects of treatment, how often will you be coming into clinic? People want to know simple things like what do you dress comfortably to come into clinic? What does the infusion room look like? It’s things that maybe as providers we don’t take a moment, because it’s second nature up to us to know kind of the…what the logistics are to somebody’s day in an infusion center.

But this is brand new information for most patients, and that can be incredibly crippling and overwhelming. So on top of providing concrete information as far as what side effects to expect, I also want to be doing a real time evaluation about what their supports are, what their needs are, are they losing weight, are they coming in and need help right off the bat with a dietitian? Are we assessing for their nutritional needs? Are we assessing their psychological needs? Because we know that anxiety, depression, fear of the unknown are very common emotions as a part of a cancer diagnosis and especially one as significant as small cell lung cancer.

So we really want to be talking to patients about the resources that we can encourage them to tap into or think about and talk with their family if they think they would benefit from these. I think one referral that I think often goes later in offering to patients is referrals to palliative care. And I think I just want to make a quick point, and Dr. Sands can talk to it as well, is the importance of implementing palliative care along a patient’s journey early. And there is data to support that when you implement palliative care services early, patients are living actually longer.

Jennifer Temple put out a study probably several years ago, Jacob, you could probably quote me on the date of that. But it’s shown that patients are living longer with improved quality when resources such as palliative care are implemented earlier. And I think it’s very difficult for patients when they hear the word palliative care. They already have this notion in their head that they don’t understand actually what it is. I think a lot of patients think that it’s hospice. They think I’m dying, you, you’re sending me to hospice. There are no more treatment options.

But I implement palliative care as an understanding of supportive oncology. How can we support you to improve your quality of life from the get-go of when you come in and start your journey? And, I make these referrals early. I do it in a non-threatening way and just lay it out as an additional support to help improve their quality of life and really balance the treatment that we’re giving them with again improving their quality of life over the long term. So I do think that referrals to palliative care should be considered and implemented early in a patient’s course in treatment.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Dr. Sands?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Yeah, I agree. Supportive oncology is such an important component, and they often can play a role in helping with controlling symptoms like pain. I mean, of course, I want to know about pain. Of course, we can manage pain as well and I’m happy to add that into office visits. I also find though that for patients sometimes having visits where they’re talking more about those symptoms and others where they’re talking more about the cancer, actually for some patients works better for them. I am happy to help manage pain and do other kinds of medications around symptom management. So, you know, that can also happen within our clinic as well.

But like I said, I think for some patients, it works better for them having these two different teams that they’re interacting with and kind of sharing their story a bit more. It also allows them to really share that story in the way that they want to talk about it. And sometimes those are two different ways that they want to talk about it. You know, also related to the whole shared decision-making and discussion of toxicity profile versus benefits and stuff, I think I’ve often heard patients come in, you know, I see a lot of second opinions and such.

And so they’ll come in and say, well, this doctor told me all of these horrible things that are going to happen with the treatment. And so why would I even want to do that? And, you know, this is…I never actually know what was said to somebody, right? Because people are telling me what they heard, and I’ve heard patients come back or, you know, they get admitted to the hospital and what they tell the inpatient team about my discussion with them. I’m like, oh, I would never say something like what you just said.

So again, patients are experiencing all of this in an emotional way, and I think we have to be attentive to that. So the way that I’ll often talk about this is not just a matter of it’s not. I want to highlight what it’s not first. It is not saying, oh, all of these terrible things could happen. Because that way, if it does, I told you that was a possibility. Okay, that’s not necessarily the transparency we’re going for. The transparency we’re going for is kind of the overall context. Like, hey, this is the overall risk. Yes, here are some things, but here’s the likelihood of those things.

And so what I’ll often do for patients is I’ll often use the analogy. I often talk in analogies. I think that makes it more accessible. For this one, I’ll commonly say, if I were to ask you what could happen on my drive home, then you’re probably going to say, oh, you might hit some traffic, but you’ll be fine. And if I say, well, what are all the things that could happen? Now, that becomes this long, scary list. Now I often say off the bat, like, a drive home is nothing like having cancer.

I’m not saying that these are comparable, but just talking about it in a way in this analogy, so we can give more context so when I talk about, oh, the risk of immunotherapy, okay, you can end up with type 1 diabetes. You can have inflammation and problems with your heart. Okay, these sound like really severe, scary things. The likelihood of this kind of a thing happening is like on the scale of a bad car accident. Yes, it can happen, but this shouldn’t drive your decision-making. That’s very different than just listing out all the different things that can happen.

And I really encourage other providers to talk with their patients in some kind of a way that provides that. We’ll say, okay, here’s the long list of all the things that can happen. More realistically, what I expect is this. 

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Yeah. Thank you for highlighting that. Thank you for highlighting that balanced approach. I love the analogy with the ride home. I think that’s great advice for providers. 


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Turning the Tide: Clinical Insights Into a New Era of Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment

Dr. Jacob Sands, Associate Chair of Thoracic Oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, outlines breakthroughs in SCLC treatment, from the integration of immunotherapy in first-line to promising results in innovative clinical trials, including CAR T-cell therapy and antibody-drug conjugates.  

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

What are the most significant advances in the current treatment landscape for small cell lung cancer? Five years. And how are they impacting patient outcomes?

Dr. Jacobs Sands:

Well, thankfully, you know, there’s a lot to talk about in this space, especially if we’re including current clinical trials, because there are a lot of drugs in development that have shown really exciting results. But aside from that, I’m going to stretch a little more than five years, because it’s so meaningful. Is the immunotherapy drugs that are now part of our first-line treatment. These are drugs that, unfortunately, probably work well for maybe 20 percent of individuals. But amongst those in whom these work, they can work amazingly well. We have patients that are more than five years out from their initial diagnosis with widespread small cell lung cancer that have never gotten another treatment. They got chemotherapy and immunotherapy and that’s it.

They’ve not yet had another treatment. Their disease is controlled. Now this is an, unfortunately, smaller subset of patients that this is working like this for. But I mean, I’m stretching to say that we might actually be curing some people of their incurable disease with the incorporation of these immunotherapy drugs. So first-line setting chemo plus immunotherapy has been the standard of care. Now more recently we’ve seen the ADRIATIC trial. This was a trial in limited stage after chemo-radiation that now uses durvalumab (Imfinzi), one of those immunotherapy drugs after chemo-immuno it actually had a pretty impressive impact on survival on the time to the disease occurring as well as overall survival of patients made a really quite a big difference.

So that’s now the standard of care after chemo radiation for limited stage to then get immunotherapy for two years. But five years ago, also saw lurbinectedin (Zepzelca). This is another chemo agent, got a publication from that study that led to approval. This was 105 patient cohort within a basket trial. So single arm. That led to FDA approval of a new drug for small cell lung cancer. Lurbinectedin is a once every three week drug. It’s pretty well-tolerated. I think as far as chemotherapy drugs work, it does not have a lot of the toxicities that people worry about. There are some things to monitor, but generally it is a manageable side effect profile as a new drug. More recently, we have tarlatamab (Imdelltra). This has made big headlines and it was a trial that enrolled in the third line and beyond. But the data was so good it got approved in the second line. So, you know, I often quote that about half of patients that get the drug benefit from the drug. It’s 40 percent that have a response–response meaning that it shrank by more than 30 percent. And amongst those individuals, 43 percent of patients were still on the treatment at the time of the last data kit.

And that’s beyond a year of ongoing treatment and some quite a bit more. So we don’t yet know the ceiling as far as how long this drug can work for. When it’s working. I mentioned about half of patients benefiting, but the response rate being 40 percent. That’s because even with stable disease, meaning that it could have shrank by less than 30 percent or grown by less than 20 percent. But in that range we see disease control and some portion of that out beyond six months, which I think is meaningful in the third-line and beyond setting. Now, of course, what patients want and what we want for them is for something to work for years, not just for months now, you know. But if something works for six months even, and then you have something else that works and then something else that works and something else, then you can string that out to a much longer timeframe. But it’s exciting to see potentially years of benefit from another immunotherapy drug. Now, with that being said, there’s a lot going on in clinical trials that’s quite exciting too. And I’d say one of the benefits at Dana-Farber as well as some of the other bigger academic centers is that we have multiple trials for small cell lung cancer.

One right now is CAR T. So this is essentially collecting the immune cells from patients. We send those off and process them so that they are trained essentially to recognize small cell lung cancer cells. And then we infuse those back into patients. So patients get their own cells back, but now are essentially trained to find small cell lung cancer cells and kill them. So the treatment is essentially training someone’s own immune system to do the work. And it’s exciting. We’ve enrolled patients on that now and to see that technology now coming into the space on top of multiple drugs, which we call targeted chemotherapy. These are essentially chemo that is bound to an antibody, so that goes and finds a certain receptor on the surface of cells where it then pulls that compound into the cell. And so the chemotherapy is delivered into the cancer cells instead of just going everywhere. And that’s another whole class of technology that’s happening in clinical trials. Now, that’s a bit of scratching the surface as far as clinical trials. There are multiple other things that I could go into, but trials options, I think, are a really important consideration in the small cell space.

I’d say, at this point, especially if you combine what I just said about the past five years now with what’s going on in available clinical trials, there is more happening in the small cell space of novel, effective treatment options than the history of everything up to this point. And so it’s really exciting to see that as an option for patients and to see people do well for such extended periods of time.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wow, that is extremely exciting. When you talked about curing an incurable disease, that’s when you really got my attention. 


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Small Cell Lung Cancer Care: Striking a Balance With Urgency and Shared Decision-Making

How can experts strike a balance between urgency and shared decision-making? Dr. Jacob Sands and Nurse Practitioner Stephanie McDonald of Dana-Farber share how they navigate the urgency of starting treatment while prioritizing shared decision-making in small cell lung cancer care. They explore the importance of open communication, normalizing patient overwhelm, and building trust through collaborative care. 

English Guide|Spanish Guide

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Related Resources:

Enhancing Collaborative Decision-Making in Small Cell Lung Cancer Care
Enhancing Collaborative Decision-Making in Small Cell Lung Cancer Care
Turning the Tide: Clinical Insights Into a New Era of Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment
Turning the Tide: Clinical Insights Into a New Era of Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment

Helping Patients Navigate SCLC Treatment: Tools, Transparency, and Supportive Care

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Staying where you just left with this degree of urgency, how do you balance the urgency of starting treatment with this shared decision-making? And are there any tools or any tactics that you can share with the audience?

Stephanie McDonald: 

So first of all, I think being honest and having transparency with our patients, I always really try to aim to provide really clear, open communication about their diagnosis and or summarizing their treatment options that were reviewed with them. I think, you know, I’m sensitive, but I want to be really honest in explaining kind of the nature of their illness and really that urgency to start treatment. But like I said, I also want to give space to be able to ask questions and express concerns.

I’m also open about the, you know, the advances in treatment associated with small cell lung cancer with, you know, improved response rates and a variety of clinical trial options. I know Dr. Sands could probably speak to that even more. But I really do think it’s important that we have these discussions with their patients, because it really is a different field now than it was even 5, 10 years ago when patients are diagnosed with small cell lung cancer. And so I think it’s really important to have a conversation with these patients about balancing treatment with their goals of care and really understanding what their goals are, what they find as kind of important to them, what’s important to their family.

But to be able to just speak with patients, it’s not always like a tool but just having a listening ear and letting patients ask questions and being with them to be able to answer all their questions that they have.I feel like that builds a very trusting relationship from the get-go, which I think is crucial, especially with this diagnosis, when things can change pretty rapidly.

Dr. Nicole Rochester::

Thank you so much. Yes, Dr. Sands.

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Oh, I mean, to that point, the two visits can be very, very helpful, where when I’m talking with patients, I will often call out. I mean, frequently I can tell, like, hey, someone. They lost the whole information we’re discussing. Like, they went into their own head. It’s natural. The situation often just feels surreal with people. They were fine, and now all of a sudden, they’re in an oncologist’s office talking about having small cell lung cancer. It’s disorienting. And I’ll often acknowledge that for people, I’ll say to them, hey, I usually find that people just feel the room spinning around them in the middle of a discussion like this. And if you feel that way, it’s totally natural. And I’ll often say that when I can see that someone has lost me, or it doesn’t seem like they’re tracking everything I’m saying. And usually people say, yeah, I don’t know what you said, but I think in doing that one, my goal is to essentially relieve any pressure. Like, hey, if you’re not catching everything I’m saying, it’s okay. We’re going to come back to it, because you’re at the center of all of this.

And I’ll call that out. Sometimes when discussing treatment options as well, I’ll call out common misconceptions. Oh, people usually come in here thinking that if they get chemotherapy, that means they’re going to be laid up in bed vomiting without hair. And almost always people go, doesn’t it? And thankfully, nausea is not nearly the problem. It used to be the first-line regimen for small cell lung cancer. People do lose their hair. And I try to really be very up-front about the things I expect, but also being very up-front about the things I don’t expect. Yes, they can happen, but I don’t expect that.

People often come in thinking the worst of everything, that a lung cancer diagnosis means that at any moment they can just drop dead, and any treatment is just going to cause a whole bunch of toxicity. And thankfully, that’s not actually the equation. And if that were the equation, then being an oncologist would essentially be torturing people, and that’s a horrible job, and we wouldn’t do that. But the goal in all of this from the beginning, most people want to be very clear their goal is prolonged quality of life. And so I will frame the discussion around that goal and make sure that we’re on the same page about the reason that we’re doing any of this, the reason we’re discussing it, and also making it very clear that they have a choice in all of this.

Dr. Jacob Sands:

But I think some of that is also framing it in a way that feels right where it can be hard sometimes to make a decision. And I’ll say it’s normal to not be sure what to do sometimes, because there is not an option here that’s appealing. There is no option that’s like, oh, that sounds great. We’re choosing between two things we don’t want. So let’s kind of anchor around what is going to drive those decisions. Usually for the first treatment, that’s not such a dilemma. I mean, this is an aggressive cancer that the first treatment often works great, and it has the real potential of working for a very long time. This is wonderful. Our first-line treatment really is very effective.

And it’s exciting that we do also now have other often effective treatments that we can discuss. And so I know we’ll kind of get to that a little further down the line. But essentially what I’m highlighting is anchoring around what the patient is emotionally experiencing, because we all know it’s tough. Like, we work in an intellectual space, but we all live our lives in an emotional space. And so that’s where there can really be a big disconnect.

If we’re just talking, like, computer. But people are living their lives emotionally. You flip the script, and all of a sudden the healthcare practitioner is the one that’s disoriented. If it’s like our own lives, that someone else is interacting with us. So we have to be attentive to that and kind of, what are the beliefs coming in? Okay, what is the reality of those? And how much of a factor and how much do we really expect in all of this as a way of balancing this out? Now, that being said, even with all that effort, the room spins around people.

And so for them to then have a separate visit with Stephanie where she’s going to go through things in a different way, and then that ends up being another way. Like, okay, they got all that. They’ve maybe processed some of that. It’s impossible to process everything but some of that. And now they’re meeting fresh again and going to go through things in a different way then I think people retain quite a bit more. It’s also really important because Ms. McDonald and them are going to interact a lot as well. We’re a care team and so I often say to them, hey, I really want you to meet her, because she’s an important part of the team too. And that way she knows you. You know her because we work together.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I  really appreciate how both of you really focused on humanizing the patient and normalizing the overwhelm and the confusion and all of the emotions that go along with a new cancer diagnosis.


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Empowering Patients with Small Cell Lung Cancer: A Team Approach to Tough Conversations

Dr. Jacob Sands and Nurse Practitioner Stephanie McDonald of Dana-Farber discuss the communication challenges of treating small cell lung cancer, often diagnosed at advanced stages. Moderated by Dr. Nicole Rochester, the conversation highlights the importance of patient education, reducing stigma, emotional support, and team-based care to empower patients and improve outcomes.

English Guide|Spanish Guide

See More from EPEP SCLC

Related Resources:

Small Cell Lung Cancer Care: Striking a Balance With Urgency and Shared Decision-Making
Small Cell Lung Cancer Care: Striking a Balance With Urgency and Shared Decision-Making
Turning the Tide: Clinical Insights Into a New Era of Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment
Turning the Tide: Clinical Insights Into a New Era of Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment

Helping Patients Navigate SCLC Treatment: Tools, Transparency, and Supportive Care

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

There is a lot to unpack given small cell lung cancer is often diagnosed at advanced stages, often requiring rapid decision-making due to its aggressive nature and limiting the time for in-depth discussions. Can you speak to some of the unique obstacles you faced in your own practice around patient-provider communication and shared decision-making?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Well, I think this is something that’s applicable across all tumor types. Although then I’ll get to the fact that I think to some of the things that I think are more common when in the small cell lung cancer space. First of all, we now live in an era where information is out there, and patients will go looking for information. They’ll come in with an array of things and varying levels of confidence in what they’ve read about online as well. And I do not discourage that.

I think I’m different than some other providers and I say, great, you want to read about things, read about them. If there’s something that’s really compelling to you, bring it in and let’s talk about it. Now, if there are things where you’re like, gosh, that doesn’t sound right, but I’m going to ask about it, then ask about it. Let’s make sure we go over everything that you want to discuss. And I really make an effort to address every question that patients have. Now a lot of times, there are things we can’t know the answer to, But I don’t discourage them asking. And I also will say to them, I am going to try as best as I can to really directly address any question that you have.

And sometimes there’s not a solid kind of short answer. And so we’ll talk about how it’s hard to predict that. But I encourage people to ask questions. I want to make sure that patients know everything that they want to know, and I want to make sure that they’re engaged in their own care and that they feel empowered around everything within their care. Sometimes I think it can be easier for patients to feel lost within the system or kind of feel like they don’t have enough. But if people feel pressured in time or limited in what they can ask, then they just don’t know as much of what’s going on.

So I encourage it. I directly answer everything that I can. Now within small cell lung cancer specifically, with this being such a high smoking prevalence cancer where we know that cigaretteor any kind of smoking essentiallyincreases the risk within this population, within the lung cancer space, especially where there is this direct correlation that is widely known, I think that stigma can get in the way for a lot of people. And I’ll say off the bat that I know of patients who tell people publicly that they have breast cancer instead of lung cancer so that they don’t get the questions about, oh, did you smoke? Of course, we know that there’s a large population of individuals with lung cancer who never smoked.

And it’s often very surprising for people to hear that, that anyone with lungs can get lung cancer, as we often say, but small cell lung cancer is far more common in a population of patients with a heavy smoking history. That’s not 100 percent.I know patients who never smoked, they got small cell but overwhelmingly. And so a lot of the communication in small cell lung cancer, I try to gauge from the start how much is this kind of impacting their mental space around it and how do I do the best that I can to like, remove that guilt. And hey, we’re starting from here. Let’s take this going forward.

Now, for some people, it is a big space. For others, you know, that’s just not in their mindset, or it’s just hard to tell. So I try to gauge that oftentimes there can be kind of family conflict around this or someone still smokes. And I really try to remove guilt of still smoking as well. Because if people with decades of smoking history feel guilt, they’re actually more inclined to keep smoking, because that’s how that then helps them handle those feelings, those like, negative feelings. And so I think that is tied into this discussion in the small cell space that it’s not in all tumor types.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you so much for sharing that. Dr. Sands. You said three of my favorite E words, which are educate, engage, and empower. I really appreciate you sharing your approach. I’m going to go to you, Ms. McDonald. What’s your perspective as a nurse practitioner, and what are the primary obstacles that you face regarding shared decision-making and communication in small cell lung cancer care?

Stephanie McDonald:

I often think that small cell lung cancer is diagnosed in advanced stages, and treatment decisions sometimes need to be made pretty quickly. So from the time that a patient has their initial consult with their medical oncologist, they may be starting their first-line therapy within a week, sometimes a couple of days. So I think it limits the opportunity for a really thorough or in-depth conversation with patients and families that you do. They do happen in the initial consult, but I think these patients really need, you know, follow-up visits and frequent check-ins to be able to fully digest the information that they’ve been receiving.

I think there are also kind of obstacles in patients’ emotional response to their diagnosis. I mean, given the aggressive nature of small cell lung cancer, I think many patients and their family members tend to be overwhelmed by the news, and this can really impede their ability to engage in decision-making fully. I think that patients’ ability to proces and understand details in this scenario may be limited, and often the first visits tend to be pretty overwhelming. And I think that patients don’t always remember what was discussed in great detail with their provider.

So I think it’s a great opportunity for advanced practice providers to be able to implement or provide a different setting, separate from their initial consult with their medical oncologist in a slowed down setting, separate from going over all that initial information to really reflect on what was reviewed with the patient, go over what their care plan is and answer any questions that them and their…both the patient and their family have. I think that is super important.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I appreciate you sharing that. I can only imagine how emotional this must be for families and like you said, they’re going to need that time to process. So this team-based approach sounds phenomenal. 


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HCP Roundtable: Optimizing Shared Decision-Making and Communication in Small Cell Lung Cancer Care

How can healthcare providers cultivate meaningful communication and support shared decision-making in small cell lung cancer (SCLC) care? Dr. Jacob Sands, Associate Chair of Thoracic Oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, joins Nurse Practitioner Stephanie McDonald of Dana-Farber to discuss practical strategies for strengthening patient-provider relationships, fostering collaboration, and advancing patient-centered care to improve outcomes for those living with SCLC. 

English Guide|Spanish Guide

See More from EPEP SCLC

Related Resources:

Outdated Small Cell Lung Cancer Clinical Approaches: Addressing Gaps in Patient Management

Outdated Small Cell Lung Cancer Clinical Approaches: Addressing Gaps in Patient Management

Expert Perspective on Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment Barriers

Expert Perspective on Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment Barriers

What Small Cell Lung Cancer Strategies and Innovations Can Improve Survival Outcomes?

What Small Cell Lung Cancer Strategies and Innovations Can Improve Survival Outcomes?

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Welcome to this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients EPEP program. I’m Dr. Nicole Rochester, founder and CEO of Your GPS Doc, and the host for today’s program. EPEP is a Patient Empowerment Network program that serves as a secure space for healthcare providers to learn techniques for improving physician-patient communication and to overcome practice barriers.

Today, we are discussing optimizing shared decision-making and communication in small cell lung cancer care. We’re going to discuss how healthcare providers can foster shared decision-making and improve physician patient communication in the management of small cell lung cancer, as well as strategies that healthcare providers can implement to enhance patient-centric care and drive better outcomes in SCLC treatment. 

It is my privilege to be joined today by Dr. Jacob Sands of Dana-Farber Institute. Dr. Sands is the Associate Chair of Thoracic Oncology at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and an Assistant professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Sands conducts clinical trials with novel treatment options with a particular focus on small cell lung cancer and antibody drug conjugates. Thank you so much for joining today’s EPEP program. Dr. Sands.

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Thank you so much for having me happy to be here.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

It is also my pleasure to be joined by Ms. Stephanie McDonald, a nurse practitioner in the thoracic oncology program at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, Massachusetts. Ms. McDonald’s clinical interests include targeted therapy for lung cancer, immune checkpoint inhibitor toxicity management and streamlining chemotherapy, education for patients and families, providing an individualized plan for support, guidance, and education to prepare patients and families for their cancer journey. Thank you so much for joining me today, Ms. McDonald.

Stephanie McDonald:

Thank you so much for having me. It’s a pleasure to be here.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

So let’s start our discussion today by looking at the obstacles that surround provider-patient communication and shared decision-making in small cell lung cancer care. Let’s start with some facts that might help frame our discussion. And I’m going to start with you, Dr. Sands. There is a lot to unpack given small cell lung cancer is often diagnosed at advanced stages, often requiring rapid decision-making due to its aggressive nature and limiting the time for in-depth discussions. Can you speak to some of the unique obstacles you faced in your own practice around patient-provider communication and shared decision-making?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Well, I think this is something that’s applicable across all tumor types. Although then I’ll get to the fact that I think to some of the things that I think are more common when in the small cell lung cancer space. First of all, we now live in an era where information is out there, and patients will go looking for information. They’ll come in with an array of things and varying levels of confidence in what they’ve read about online as well. And I do not discourage that. I think I’m different than some other providers and I say, great, you want to read about things, read about them. If there’s something that’s really compelling to you, bring it in and let’s talk about it.

Now, if there are things where you’re like, gosh, that doesn’t sound right, but I’m going to ask about it, then ask about it. Let’s make sure we go over everything that you want to discuss. And I really make an effort to address every question that patients have. Now a lot of times, there are things we can’t know the answer to, But I don’t discourage them asking. And I also will say to them, I am going to try as best as I can to really directly address any question that you have.

And sometimes there’s not a solid kind of short answer. And so we’ll talk about how it’s hard to predict that. But I encourage people to ask questions. I want to make sure that patients know everything that they want to know, and I want to make sure that they’re engaged in their own care and that they feel empowered around everything within their care. Sometimes I think it can be easier for patients to feel lost within the system or kind of feel like they don’t have enough. But if people feel pressured in time or limited in what they can ask, then they just don’t know as much of what’s going on. So I encourage it. I directly answer everything that I can.

Now within small cell lung cancer specifically, with this being such a high smoking prevalence cancer where we know that cigaretteor any kind of smoking essentiallyincreases the risk within this population, within the lung cancer space, especially where there is this direct correlation that is widely known, I think that stigma can get in the way for a lot of people. And I’ll say off the bat that I know of patients who tell people publicly that they have breast cancer instead of lung cancer so that they don’t get the questions about, oh, did you smoke? Of course, we know that there’s a large population of individuals with lung cancer who never smoked.

And it’s often very surprising for people to hear that, that anyone with lungs can get lung cancer, as we often say, but small cell lung cancer is far more common in a population of patients with a heavy smoking history. That’s not 100 percent. I know patients who never smoked, they got small cell but overwhelmingly. And so a lot of the communication in small cell lung cancer, I try to gauge from the start how much is this kind of impacting their mental space around it and how do I do the best that I can to like, remove that guilt.

And hey, we’re starting from here. Let’s take this going forward. Now, for some people, it is a big space. For others, you know, that’s just not in their mindset, or it’s just hard to tell. So I try to gauge that oftentimes there can be kind of family conflict around this or someone still smokes. And I really try to remove guilt of still smoking as well. Because if people with decades of smoking history feel guilt, they’re actually more inclined to keep smoking, because that’s how that then helps them handle those feelings, those like, negative feelings. And so I think that is tied into this discussion in the small cell space that it’s not in all tumor types.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you so much for sharing that. Dr. Sands. You said three of my favorite E words, which are educate, engage, and empower. I really appreciate you sharing your approach. I’m going to go to you, Ms. McDonald. What’s your perspective as a nurse practitioner, and what are the primary obstacles that you face regarding shared decision-making and communication in small cell lung cancer care?

Stephanie McDonald:

I often think that small cell lung cancer is diagnosed in advanced stages, and treatment decisions sometimes need to be made pretty quickly. So from the time that a patient has their initial consult with their medical oncologist, they may be starting their first-line therapy within a week, sometimes a couple of days. So I think it limits the opportunity for a really thorough or in-depth conversation with patients and families that you do. They do happen in the initial consult, but I think these patients really need, you know, follow-up visits and frequent check-ins to be able to fully digest the information that they’ve been receiving.

I think there are also kind of obstacles in patients’ emotional response to their diagnosis. I mean, given the aggressive nature of small cell lung cancer, I think many patients and their family members tend to be overwhelmed by the news, and this can really impede their ability to engage in decision-making fully. I think that patients’ ability to process and understand details in this scenario may be limited, and often the first visits tend to be pretty overwhelming. And I think that patients don’t always remember what was discussed in great detail with their provider.

So I think it’s a great opportunity for advanced practice providers to be able to implement or provide a different setting, separate from their initial consult with their medical oncologist in a slowed down setting, separate from going over all that initial information to really reflect on what was reviewed with the patient, go over what their care plan is and answer any questions that them and their…both the patient and their family have. I think that is super important.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I appreciate you sharing that. I can only imagine how emotional this must be for families and like you said, they’re going to need that time to process. So this team-based approach sounds phenomenal. Staying where you just left with this degree of urgency, how do you balance the urgency of starting treatment with this shared decision-making? And are there any tools or any tactics that you can share with the audience?

Stephanie McDonald:

So first of all, I think being honest and having transparency with our patients, I always really try to aim to provide really clear, open communication about their diagnosis and or summarizing their treatment options that were reviewed with them. I think, you know, I’m sensitive, but I want to be really honest in explaining kind of the nature of their illness and really that urgency to start treatment. But like I said, I also want to give space to be able to ask questions and express concerns.

I’m also open about the, you know, the advances in treatment associated with small cell lung cancer with, you know, improved response rates and a variety of clinical trial options. I know Dr. Sands could probably speak to that even more. But I really do think it’s important that we have these discussions with their patients, because it really is a different field now than it was even 5, 10 years ago when patients are diagnosed with small cell lung cancer. And so I think it’s really important to have a conversation with these patients about balancing treatment with their goals of care and really understanding what their goals are, what they find as kind of important to them, and what’s important to their family.

But to be able to just speak with patients, it’s not always like a tool but just having a listening ear and letting patients ask questions and being with them to be able to answer all their questions that they have. I feel like that builds a very trusting relationship from the get-go, which I think is crucial, especially with this diagnosis, when things can change pretty rapidly.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you so much. Yes, Dr. Sands.

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Oh, I mean, to that point, the two visits can be very, very helpful, where when I’m talking with patients, I will often call out. I mean, frequently I can tell, like, hey, someone. They lost the whole information we’re discussing. Like, they went into their own head. It’s natural. The situation often just feels surreal with people. They were fine, and now all of a sudden, they’re in an oncologist’s office talking about having small cell lung cancer. It’s disorienting.

And I’ll often acknowledge that for people, I’ll say to them, hey, I usually find that people just feel the room spinning around them in the middle of a discussion like this. And if you feel that way, it’s totally natural. And I’ll often say that when I can see that someone has lost me, or it doesn’t seem like they’re tracking everything I’m saying. And usually people say, yeah, I don’t know what you said, but I think in doing that one, my goal is to essentially relieve any pressure. Like, hey, if you’re not catching everything I’m saying, it’s okay. We’re going to come back to it, because you’re at the center of all of this.

And I’ll call that out. Sometimes when discussing treatment options as well, I’ll call out common misconceptions. Oh, people usually come in here thinking that if they get chemotherapy, that means they’re going to be laid up in bed vomiting without hair. And almost always people go, doesn’t it? And thankfully, nausea is not nearly the problem. It used to be the first-line regimen for small cell lung cancer. People do lose their hair. And I try to really be very up-front about the things I expect, but also being very up-front about the things I don’t expect. Yes, they can happen, but I don’t expect that.

People often come in thinking the worst of everything, that a lung cancer diagnosis means that at any moment they can just drop dead, and any treatment is just going to cause a whole bunch of toxicity. And thankfully, that’s not actually the equation. And if that were the equation, then being an oncologist would essentially be torturing people, and that’s a horrible job, and we wouldn’t do that. But the goal in all of this from the beginning, most people want to be very clear their goal is prolonged quality of life. And so I will frame the discussion around that goal and make sure that we’re on the same page about the reason that we’re doing any of this, the reason we’re discussing it, and also making it very clear that they have a choice in all of this.

But I think some of that is also framing it in a way that feels right where it can be hard sometimes to make a decision. And I’ll say it’s normal to not be sure what to do sometimes, because there is not an option here that’s appealing. There is no option that’s like, oh, that sounds great. We’re choosing between two things we don’t want. So let’s kind of anchor around what is going to drive those decisions. Usually for the first treatment, that’s not such a dilemma.

I mean, this is an aggressive cancer that the first treatment often works great, and it has the real potential of working for a very long time. This is wonderful. Our first-line treatment really is very effective. And it’s exciting that we do also now have other often effective treatments that we can discuss. And so I know we’ll kind of get to that a little further down the line. But essentially what I’m highlighting is anchoring around what the patient is emotionally experiencing, because we all know it’s tough. Like, we work in an intellectual space, but we all live our lives in an emotional space. And so that’s where there can really be a big disconnect.

If we’re just talking, like, computer. But people are living their lives emotionally. You flip the script, and all of a sudden the healthcare practitioner is the one that’s disoriented. If it’s like our own lives, that someone else is interacting with us. So we have to be attentive to that and kind of, what are the beliefs coming in? Okay, what is the reality of those? And how much of a factor and how much do we really expect in all of this as a way of balancing this out?

Now, that being said, even with all that effort, the room spins around people. And so for them to then have a separate visit with Stephanie where she’s going to go through things in a different way, and then that ends up being another way. Like, okay, they got all that. They’ve maybe processed some of that. It’s impossible to process everything but some of that. And now they’re meeting fresh again and going to go through things in a different way then I think people retain quite a bit more. It’s also really important because Ms. McDonald and them are going to interact a lot as well. We’re a care team and so I often say to them, hey, I really want you to meet her, because she’s an important part of the team too. And that way she knows you. You know her because we work together.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I really appreciate how both of you really focused on humanizing the patient and normalizing the overwhelm and the confusion and all of the emotions that go along with a new cancer diagnosis. Well, we’re going to shift to practical tools and resources to empower patients and enhance long term outcomes in small cell lung cancer. As you both have discussed, there are some challenges with survival outcomes, particularly for extensive stage small cell lung cancer. Dr. Sands, I’m going to start with you. What are the most significant advances in the current treatment landscape for small cell lung cancer? Five years. And how are they impacting patient outcomes?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Well, thankfully, you know, there’s a lot to talk about in this space, especially if we’re including current clinical trials, because there are a lot of drugs in development that have shown really exciting results. But aside from that, I’m going to stretch a little more than five years, because it’s so meaningful. Is the immunotherapy drugs that are now part of our first-line treatment. These are drugs that, unfortunately, probably work well for maybe 20 percent of individuals. But amongst those in whom these work, they can work amazingly well. We have patients that are more than five years out from their initial diagnosis with widespread small cell lung cancer that have never gotten another treatment. They got chemotherapy and immunotherapy and that’s it.

They’ve not yet had another treatment. Their disease is controlled. Now this is an, unfortunately, smaller subset of patients that this is working like this for. But I mean, I’m stretching to say that we might actually be curing some people of their incurable disease with the incorporation of these immunotherapy drugs. So first-line setting chemo plus immunotherapy has been the standard of care. Now more recently we’ve seen the ADRIATIC trial. This was a trial in limited stage after chemo-radiation that now uses durvalumab (Imfinzi), one of those immunotherapy drugs after chemo-immuno it actually had a pretty impressive impact on survival on the time to the disease occurring as well as overall survival of patients made a really quite a big difference.

So that’s now the standard of care after chemo radiation for limited stage to then get immunotherapy for two years. But five years ago, also saw lurbinectedin (Zepzelca). This is another chemo agent, got a publication from that study that led to approval. This was 105 patient cohort within a basket trial. So single arm. That led to FDA approval of a new drug for small cell lung cancer. Lurbinectedin is a once every three week drug. It’s pretty well-tolerated. I think as far as chemotherapy drugs work, it does not have a lot of the toxicities that people worry about.

There are some things to monitor, but generally it is a manageable side effect profile as a new drug. More recently, we have tarlatamab (Imdelltra). This has made big headlines and it was a trial that enrolled in the third line and beyond. But the data was so good it got approved in the second line. So, you know, I often quote that about half of patients that get the drug benefit from the drug. It’s 40 percent that have a response–response meaning that it shrank by more than 30 percent. And amongst those individuals, 43 percent of patients were still on the treatment at the time of the last data kit.

And that’s beyond a year of ongoing treatment and some quite a bit more. So we don’t yet know the ceiling as far as how long this drug can work for. When it’s working. I mentioned about half of patients benefiting, but the response rate being 40 percent. That’s because even with stable disease, meaning that it could have shrank by less than 30 percent or grown by less than 20 percent. But in that range we see disease control and some portion of that out beyond six months, which I think is meaningful in the third-line and beyond setting.

Now, of course, what patients want and what we want for them is for something to work for years, not just for months now, you know. But if something works for six months even, and then you have something else that works and then something else that works and something else, then you can string that out to a much longer timeframe. But it’s exciting to see potentially years of benefit from another immunotherapy drug. Now, with that being said, there’s a lot going on in clinical trials that’s quite exciting too. And I’d say one of the benefits at Dana-Farber as well as some of the other bigger academic centers is that we have multiple trials for small cell lung cancer.

One right now is CAR T. So this is essentially collecting the immune cells from patients. We send those off and process them so that they are trained essentially to recognize small cell lung cancer cells. And then we infuse those back into patients. So patients get their own cells back, but now are essentially trained to find small cell lung cancer cells and kill them. So the treatment is essentially training someone’s own immune system to do the work. And it’s exciting. We’ve enrolled patients on that now and to see that technology now coming into the space on top of multiple drugs, which we call targeted chemotherapy.

These are essentially chemo that is bound to an antibody, so that goes and finds a certain receptor on the surface of cells where it then pulls that compound into the cell. And so the chemotherapy is delivered into the cancer cells instead of just going everywhere. And that’s another whole class of technology that’s happening in clinical trials. Now, that’s a bit of scratching the surface as far as clinical trials. There are multiple other things that I could go into, but trials options, I think, are a really important consideration in the small cell space.

I’d say, at this point, especially if you combine what I just said about the past five years now with what’s going on in available clinical trials, there is more happening in the small cell space of novel, effective treatment options than the history of everything up to this point. And so it’s really exciting to see that as an option for patients and to see people do well for such extended periods of time.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wow, that is extremely exciting. When you talked about curing an incurable disease, that’s when you really got my attention. So, Ms. McDonald, I want to go to you, because Dr. Sands just described some very exciting treatments with very promising results. And I can only imagine that this information, while great, is also overwhelming to patients when they’re presented with all of these options? So are there specific decision aids or tools that you use when you’re talking with patients and families to help them understand the risks and the benefits of the different treatment options as they’re making decisions?

Stephanie McDonald:

So, yes, there are a lot of different treatment options. And with that, you know, we need to be aware of the potential toxicity associated with the treatment that patients are getting, which don’t come without risks. Right. Most patients do pretty well on immunotherapy, but there definitely are toxicities, you know, as far as, like, colitis or pneumonitis and rashes. There are things that are going to be education points that need to be made with patients to know what to look out for depending on what treatment they’re getting.

So I think it is incredibly important not only to provide education sheets to patients to reinforce these discussions, but like I spoke to earlier, I have a separate visit with the patients to be able to spend at least an hour the first time they are given a treatment plan, to be able to feed through all of the potential side effects. And I don’t want to overwhelm patients because you could be a bad, you know, commercial going over every single side effect. But we do need to be realistic with patients about what to be on the lookout for, what might come up, when to call if something does occur.

So I think the most important thing is breaking it down for patients to really easy-to-understand information and you can really gauge. I prefer to see patients in-person or at least have a virtual encounter with them over like a telephone encounter, because you can really gauge how a person might be responding to what you’re teaching them.If someone’s a deer in headlights and they’re overwhelmed by the information that you’re sharing, you need to be able to stop, take a few steps back, and break it down to easy-to-understand information for not only them but for their family members.

I think it’s really important that we also care for the family member as well. IWhen you walk into the room, you’re not just taking care of the patient, you’re taking care of every single person that is in their life. Like they have supportive families who are coming to these appointments who are equally as overwhelmed, or maybe there’s a shift in their role. And now that maybe somebody was a primary caretaker, very active and matriarch, or a patriarch in the household, and now there’s a shift in a whole role and dynamic for how these patients are going forward along their journey.

So we need to be able to spend time to unpack all of that to really understand how we can best support these patients. So besides just education tools, which I think just help reinforce the information that we go over with them as far as breaking down what are the side effects of treatment, how often will you be coming into clinic? People want to know simple things like what do you dress comfortably to come into clinic? What does the infusion room look like? It’s things that maybe as providers we don’t take a moment, because it’s second nature up to us to know kind of the…what the logistics are to somebody’s day in an infusion center.

But this is brand new information for most patients, and that can be incredibly crippling and overwhelming. So on top of providing concrete information as far as what side effects to expect, I also want to be doing a real time evaluation about what their supports are, what their needs are, are they losing weight, are they coming in and need help right off the bat with a dietitian? Are we assessing for their nutritional needs? Are we assessing their psychological needs? Because we know that anxiety, depression, fear of the unknown are very common emotions as a part of a cancer diagnosis and especially one as significant as small cell lung cancer.

So we really want to be talking to patients about the resources that we can encourage them to tap into or think about and talk with their family if they think they would benefit from these. I think one referral that I think often goes later in offering to patients is referrals to palliative care. And I think I just want to make a quick point, and Dr. Sands can talk to it as well, is the importance of implementing palliative care along a patient’s journey early.

And there is data to support that when you implement palliative care services early, patients are living actually longer. Jennifer Temple put out a study probably several years ago, Jacob, you could probably quote me on the date of that. But it’s shown that patients are living longer with improved quality when resources such as palliative care are implemented earlier. And I think it’s very difficult for patients when they hear the word palliative care. They already have this notion in their head that they don’t understand actually what it is. I think a lot of patients think that it’s hospice. They think I’m dying, you, you’re sending me to hospice. There are no more treatment options.

But I implement palliative care as an understanding of supportive oncology. How can we support you to improve your quality of life from the get-go of when you come in and start your journey? And, I make these referrals early. I do it in a non-threatening way and just lay it out as an additional support to help improve their quality of life and really balance the treatment that we’re giving them with again improving their quality of life over the long term. So I do think that referrals to palliative care should be considered and implemented early in a patient’s course in treatment.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Dr. Sands?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Yeah, I agree. Supportive oncology is such an important component, and they often can play a role in helping with controlling symptoms like pain. I mean, of course, I want to know about pain. Of course, we can manage pain as well and I’m happy to add that into office visits. I also find though that for patients sometimes having visits where they’re talking more about those symptoms and others where they’re talking more about the cancer, actually for some patients works better for them. I am happy to help manage pain and do other kinds of medications around symptom management.

So, you know, that can also happen within our clinic as well. But like I said, I think for some patients, it works better for them having these two different teams that they’re interacting with and kind of sharing their story a bit more. It also allows them to really share that story in the way that they want to talk about it. And sometimes those are two different ways that they want to talk about it. You know, also related to the whole shared decision-making and discussion of toxicity profile versus benefits and stuff, I think I’ve often heard patients come in, you know, I see a lot of second opinions and such.

And so they’ll come in and say, well, this doctor told me all of these horrible things that are going to happen with the treatment. And so why would I even want to do that? And, you know, this is…I never actually know what was said to somebody, right? Because people are telling me what they heard, and I’ve heard patients come back or, you know, they get admitted to the hospital and what they tell the inpatient team about my discussion with them. I’m like, oh, I would never say something like what you just said.

So again, patients are experiencing all of this in an emotional way, and I think we have to be attentive to that. So the way that I’ll often talk about this is not just a matter of it’s not. I want to highlight what it’s not first. It is not saying, oh, all of these terrible things could happen. Because that way, if it does, I told you that was a possibility. Okay, that’s not necessarily the transparency we’re going for. The transparency we’re going for is kind of the overall context. Like, hey, this is the overall risk. Yes, here are some things, but here’s the likelihood of those things.

And so what I’ll often do for patients is I’ll often use the analogy. I often talk in analogies. I think that makes it more accessible. For this one, I’ll commonly say, if I were to ask you what could happen on my drive home, then you’re probably going to say, oh, you might hit some traffic, but you’ll be fine. And if I say, well, what are all the things that could happen? Now, that becomes this long, scary list.

Now I often say off the bat, like, a drive home is nothing like having cancer. I’m not saying that these are comparable, but just talking about it in a way in this analogy, so we can give more context so when I talk about, oh, the risk of immunotherapy, okay, you can end up with type 1 diabetes. You can have inflammation and problems with your heart. Okay, these sound like really severe, scary things. The likelihood of this kind of a thing happening is like on the scale of a bad car accident. Yes, it can happen, but this shouldn’t drive your decision-making. That’s very different than just listing out all the different things that can happen.

And I really encourage other providers to talk with their patients in some kind of a way that provides that. We’ll say, okay, here’s the long list of all the things that can happen. More realistically, what I expect is this.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Yeah. Thank you for highlighting that. Thank you for highlighting that balanced approach. I love the analogy with the ride home. I think that’s great advice for providers. Both of you have spoken as we wrap up. You’ve talked about collaborative decision-making. You have clearly highlighted how you all collaborate at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the importance of having these multiple visits. What about other members of the care team? How do you utilize social workers or patient navigators or other members in fostering collaborative decision-making in small cell lung cancer care?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Well, they’re instrumental. I mean, this really is a shared team approach. Ms. McDonald and I are at the core of that. But then around us, the social worker, really important. You know, rides can often be a real barrier to getting care. And so having a social worker involved in that, that’s one aspect that’s kind of a more obvious one. Even the emotional support as well, and logistics, drug availability and programs for assisted pay, all of these types of things.

We have whole teams that help with that. Nurse navigator is another core member, though. We meet weekly with an administrative support and administrative assistant and with a nurse navigator to go over any patients that are complex and say, okay, this is what’s going on. How can we assist them better? What’s coming up? The administrative assistant knowing, oh, this person’s going to get a scan next week, but then is coming in the next day, we need those results available. Sometimes the outside hospital hasn’t even read the scan yet. They don’t have a radiology report. But we’ll review it with our radiologist as well. Because we have that scan available now. We’ll often do scans the same day.

Patients will come in, they’ll get a scan and then they come right to clinic. And we will review the scan with our radiologist. But of course, radiology, thoracic surgery, radiation, oncology, you know, the whole multidisciplinary team is a part of that. But there are also all of these other supportive members of that team and these weekly meetings, Ms. McDonald really was at the heart of that process and saying, hey, you’ve had these complicated patients. Let’s pull together a team meeting.

That has been a gift. That’s been wonderful, because then weekly we go through this and then everything is organized, and it really reduces the number of other emails or things that could potentially slip through the cracks in the process.Now, on top of that, if you go to tarlatamab, which is an inpatient dosing, which we just don’t have that in small cell lung cancer up to this point as something that requires inpatient monitoring. And as McDonald has really been part of that core of then connecting across to the inpatient team as well, and to all the nurses to then make sure we’re all on the same page.

A colleague of ours, Dr. Rotow, who’s our clinical director, of course, was quite instrumental in the implementation of these things as well. Just to say it goes out beyond our team, specifically in the small cell space. But it’s really important to be connected in all of these ways that really helps provide patients with all the resources that are available to them as well.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Truly a team-based approach for sure. Well, it’s time to wrap up our roundtable. I have really enjoyed this conversation. I have learned a lot. And as we close, I wanted to get closing thoughts from each of you. So I’ll start with you, Ms. McDonald. What is the most important takeaway message that you want to leave other healthcare professionals who may be listening, watching regarding how we can optimize shared decision-making and communication in small cell lung cancer care?

Stephanie McDonald:

I really just think the key to optimizing shared-decision making is empathy. I think we need to take the time to really truly understand what our patients’ needs are, what their values are, and their preferences so we can be able to help align the treatment plans and the care that we give with what their goals are. And we really want to make sure that patients and their families are feeling supported and they are playing an active role in this decision-making process because at the core of it, they are what I call the captain of the ship. 

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you so much, Ms. McDonald. And what about you, Dr. Sands? What’s your final takeaway message for the audience?

Dr. Jacob Sands:

Well, I go that and thinking about when you’re talking about side effect profiles and counseling patients is what the experience is for them and coming at it as if you’re talking to your own parents. But, you know, I can go more in depth in that, but maybe more so focus on everyone who’s listening. I mean, it is hard being a healthcare provider. There is more information coming out faster and faster, and this is wonderful for patients.

There’s also a whole new era of patients really being at the center of their care. And I hear older docs talk about how, oh, this is so much slower. You’re not taking care of as many patients in the hospital as I did. Like, okay, but back in the day, it was a whole different experience. And so I think current physicians and nurse practitioners and healthcare providers are under an immense amount of pressure that is increasing day by day, year by year, in a way that isn’t fully appreciated within the system. And so just to acknowledge for everyone who’s listening, who feels like you’ve been in a crunch, I know you have. And I think part of this is then how to navigate that.

How do you go into someone’s room and emotionally actually engage and be there with them in a tough space sometimes, you know, being challenged for stuff that you shouldn’t be challenged for? It’s just people are going through an emotional experience, and they sometimes even lash out. And then how do you engage with that? And then right after that, walk into someone else’s room and start fresh and don’t carry that? And a lot of this is personal practice too. It’s like, how do we kind of shed everything at the end of an experience and not carry that forward without building a wall that keeps us from being able to engage in that space? And I will tell you, I don’t have a great answer. There is not a magical answer to that.

And so if you are feeling challenges of that, I think that is totally valid, too, as we all work to. I think this is… It is personally a lot of work to work in this space, and we always talk about the patients and what to do and what you should do and all this stuff. But how do we care for ourselves in that process and learn to let go of these things and start afresh with each person? I guess the best I can offer is validation that I know that that’s a challenging thing. And I see that, and I appreciate that, too.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Well, thank you both so much. There’s so much that was shared today, and I think the overarching message regarding shared decision-making and patient care in this space that I heard from both of you is empathy and meeting patients and families where they are. And I love the aspect of humanization of both the patient and of the doctor and the provider. So I really want to thank you both for being here today and thank you for tuning into this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients Patient Empowerment Network program. I’m your host, Dr. Nicole Rochester. Thank you so much for watching.


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Outdated Small Cell Lung Cancer Clinical Approaches: Addressing Gaps in Patient Management

How can gaps in small cell lung cancer patient management be addressed? Experts Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu from Northwell Health and thoracic oncology nurse practitioner Beth Sandy from Abraham Cancer Center discuss outdated SCLC clinical approaches and SCLC treatments and approaches that are helping improve patient care. 

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Ms. Sandy, we’re going to talk about outdated clinical approaches.  How can interdisciplinary care teams and integrated care models be optimized to better address the specific needs and gaps in the management of patients? And what are some successful examples of these models in practice?

Beth Sandy:

So when I think of outdated clinical approaches, I think of things like older chemotherapy regimens or ways that we used to manage toxicity that have changed. So, for example, when I started doing this 20 to 25 years ago, we had two drugs, and that was it. There was nothing else really, and you could throw some other chemotherapies, but, you know, really now we have approved agents that have improved survival, so we need to make sure we’re using the right thing.

And then I think the other flip side of that is our ability to manage toxicity. Again, we have much better ways to manage things like nausea, things like neutropenia, even fatigue. We have better ways of predicting and managing these things now than what we used to have. So we need to make sure that our supportive care is also maximized so that the patients can stay on treatment, because small cell lung cancer is one of the diseases where treatment is really important, that they’re getting as much of the chemotherapy as possible and on time.

Whereas in non-small cell lung cancer, I may be a little bit more, you know, okay with them taking a trip or being delayed or things. But because this is such a chemo-sensitive disease, it’s really important for us, if they want to be aggressive, to make sure that we are maximizing our toxicity management. Otherwise, they’re not going to be able to get these treatments. And that’s going to definitely worsen their outcomes.

I think also is discussing goals of care with patients. And I think there’s been a big push in the past 10 years with the early palliative care integration into our lung cancer practices. This is another thing that’s really important here, that we are having real conversations with our patients about the goals of their care. With extensive stage small cell lung cancer, our average survivals are a year or two even with treatment.

So, you know, I don’t need to say to a patient on the first visit, like, you know, this is the exact numbers, because I don’t want patients to perseverate over, you know, exact numbers. But I also think it’s important to say, you know, this is something that we can’t cure, and we’re going to try to manage it as long as possible, but it’s an aggressive disease. So, you know, what are your…what’s important to you? What are the goals that you would like to see?

And that would give an open-ended question for patients to say, well, I’d like to be alive in 10 years for this. And when they say something like that, that might be an opportunity to say, well, I hope that that can happen, but I’m really worried with what we know about this disease, that that might not be, you know, realistic. So what do you think in the short term your goals are?

And that may be an open-ended question too, where they might say, you know, I don’t want to be sick or in the hospital. That’s really important that I’m at home, or that I can do this or that. So this is a disease where we’ve been really well-trained just in the past five to 10 years about how to have these discussions with patients that I would say 20 years ago when I started, we weren’t, I don’t think personally I was as good at having these conversations, and I don’t think we were as well-trained in the profession at this. And we found that this has been extremely helpful for a good patient-provider relationship as well as patient-centered care when they’re making decisions along with us.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you, Ms. Sandy. And certainly as we talk about how to empower our patients, that shared decision-making that you talked about and incorporating goals of care is incredibly important. Dr. Seetharamu, do you have anything to add with regard to shared clinical decision-making or any other advances or things that address outdated treatment?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah, I can’t emphasize how important it is to have the goals of care discussion, but I think, you know, even though the treatment regimen has not changed for first-line much, there have been some nuances to it, right?  We are routinely including immunotherapy in first line. We now have some supportive care. Trilaciclib (Cosela) is something that we use for patients to help support and prevent admissions.

These are things that may not be done, and there are some insurance barriers. Trust me, we are on the phone a lot of times that we shouldn’t be, you know, trying to get something approved despite clear benefit and FDA approvals. So, yeah, that’s a barrier that I should have spoken about, probably number one.

But that aside, I think, you know, that’s one thing that we see that is done a little differently in the community. I spoke about tarlatamab-dlle (Imdelltra). You know, many people just jump to different treatments because they just feel like it’s not…they’re not able to offer these newer treatments because of inpatient monitoring, what have you.

So they may just start from a Platinum-etoposide to giving them, again, the same regimen or jumping to, you know,  topotecan (Hycamtin), which we know that, you know, can…there can be better regimens than that. There are some newer agents that people may not…I’ve seen that in underutilization of some of the newer. We don’t have a lot of approvals in this space, but even the ones that have been approved, there’s relative underutilization of it. So I think education of providers in the community setting is helpful.


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Expert Perspective on Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment What Small Cell Lung Cancer Strategies and Innovations Can Improve Survival Outcomes?

Small cell lung cancer survival outcomes can be improved with some strategies and innovations. Experts Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu from Northwell Health and thoracic oncology nurse practitioner Beth Sandy from Abraham Cancer Center discuss some of the approaches that are showing promise for SCLC treatment and other potential ways to improve patient outcomes. 

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Outdated Small Cell Lung Cancer Clinical Approaches: Addressing Gaps in Patient Management

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

We know that survival outcomes in small cell lung cancer remain challenging as both of you have pointed out, particularly for those with extensive stage small cell lung cancer despite incremental improvements in treatment strategies. For your colleagues that are watching this program, what are some strategies and innovations that may offer improved survival outcomes? Now I’ll start with you, Dr. Seetharamu.

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Having your group in place, identifying the providers that are dedicated to this disease. Making sure there are processes in place from early diagnosis through the treatments and seeing multiple providers is in place. Making sure that every treatment, there’s a pathway attached to it, there’s a protocol attached to it so that we are not scrambling last minute. Like Ms. Sandy said, it’s the same issue. It’s a three-day regimen. The first line, we want to make sure that, you know, the treatment starts. We are open on Saturdays too. So, you know, it has to be Monday through Thursdays. You know, simple things as that may become very challenging.

In patients with the brain metastases, making sure that they see the providers also in a very timely fashion. Sometimes the urgency may not be realized by other providers, because they’re not used to just seeing small cell lung cancer patients. Just making sure that that is communicated with teams. Yeah. I mean, just streamlining the processes as much as possible. Empowering the patients to understand their disease and making sure that they ask the right questions and be, you know, willful, you know, like complete participants, partners in the care, are some of the strategies that I can think of.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you, Dr. Seetharamu. Do you have anything you’d like to add, Ms. Sandy?

Beth Sandy:

You know, I think looking ahead for clinical trials, new drugs, it’s been really hard in small cell. We don’t have nearly the advances that we’ve seen in non-small cell lung cancer as far as any targeted therapies. Dr. Seetharamu talked about this earlier…is that maybe we could figure out some of these different subgroups by looking at their pathology and seeing if some of them may respond differently to certain agents.  I’m hopeful about some new drugs that are coming down in the pipeline.

There is an anti-TIGIT agent combined with immunotherapy that looks hopeful, that could produce some good outcomes. Combining immunotherapy drugs, combining them with chemotherapy, you know, potentially down the line we’ll see some of these drugs that will get approvals in small cell lung cancer and improve some of our progression-free survivals and hopefully overall survivals. So just continuing to enroll patients on studies. Have studies designed to fit this patient population, which we’ve significantly lacked in the past 30 years in small cell lung cancer.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you. Thank you, Ms. Sandy. And you brought up the clinical trials, and so on that same topic, Dr. Seetharamu, do you have anything to add with regard to really improving access to clinical trials for patients with small cell lung cancer?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

I think bringing clinical trials to the communities is perhaps the biggest way to do it. You know, patients with small cell, many can travel, but there are many that cannot. So it’s important to understand that making it easier for patients to know what trials are available. Right now the options that we have, the websites that we have, it’s hard even for a provider to kind of navigate through it. Making it easier. Advocacy groups, you know, ensuring that patients are tied to advocacy groups, because they get a lot of information from these groups. It’s important.

And I encourage patients to join these groups, because it empowers them and kind of unifies their voice. There are clinical trials that are looking at doing labs at home or in their local centers, so they don’t have to travel all the way to the main center to get the labs done. That can be a huge help for patients. And again, making sure that clinical trials, when they’re designed, they are adaptable to real world, you know. And Ms. Sandy brought this up before, we don’t want trials that only address the cream of the…you know, like just a small proportion of patients. It should be really viable for the larger community. Yeah. I mean, these are some…I am sure there are many other things that can be done, but I think this would be a good start.


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Expert Perspective on Small Cell Lung Cancer Treatment Barriers

Small cell lung cancer patients may encounter treatment obstacles, but what are they? Thoracic oncology nurse practitioner Beth Sandy from Abraham Cancer Center discusses barriers to treatment and clinical trials and how providers can help with solutions. 

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Small Cell Lung Cancer Patient-Centered Care: Identifying Barriers and Solutions

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Outdated Small Cell Lung Cancer Clinical Approaches: Addressing Gaps in Patient Management

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Sandy, we’ve been talking about the barriers that patients face with regard to treatment. Can you speak to some of the obstacles or barriers that are faced by healthcare providers with regard to treatment for small cell lung cancer?

Beth Sandy:

Yeah. Well, there are a couple ways to look at it.  First, if you just look at a clinical trial perspective, sometimes it’s hard for us to enroll patients with small cell lung cancer for several reasons. You know, when we enroll in a clinical trial, a lot of times we need to wait for a slot to open. Well, we don’t have time to wait for a slot when they have small cell lung cancer. Again, it’s a very aggressive disease that’s rapidly moving. So we run into this barrier all the time here because they’ll say, “Well, I have a slot that opened up in three or four weeks or four weeks.” I don’t want to wait that long to treat my patient.

So I think when we design these trials, we have to think about those kinds of things. Another point of putting patients on clinical trials is a lot of trial ineligibility criteria is for patients with brain metastases, but in small cell lung cancer, we know that like up to 75 percent of them are going to develop brain mets over the lifetime of their disease. So it’s not really a real world trial if we exclude patients with brain metastases. So we need to design our trials in a good way.

There are a lot of other barriers that we end up facing. Some of the treatments for small cell lung cancer, especially a very new treatment that’s a BiTE therapy, a bispecific T-cell engager, is very hard to administer. It requires an overnight admission for the first two treatments, it has taken us actually a pretty long time to operationalize how we were trying to give this, so it’s not easy. And we finally have figured out how to give this, but this is a drug that holds a lot of promise for our patients, but it is hard for us to administer, and it’s hard for patients as well, because then they have to say, “Oh, I have to block off an entire day for this.”

So, some of these treatments are not easy. Most treatments for small cell lung cancer are not fancy targeted therapies that can minimize toxicity. These are chemotherapies that can cause nausea, fatigue, lowering of blood counts, the majority of the treatments. So if our patients aren’t healthy, robust, and able to deliver, or we can deliver the treatment, but they’re not able to handle the treatment, that’s also worrisome and can cause a barrier for us.

So they’re not easy treatments. We need to really do our best to help support the patient and help figure out from an operationalization, there I made up a word, [laughter] but standpoint on how we can administer these safely, but in a quick, efficient way to these patients.


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Small Cell Lung Cancer Patient-Centered Care: Identifying Barriers and Solutions

What are small cell lung cancer barriers and solutions to patient-centered care? Experts Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu from Northwell Health and thoracic oncology nurse practitioner Beth Sandy from Abraham Cancer Center discuss common barriers they’ve seen with SCLC patients and ways to overcome delays in screening, diagnosis, and treatment. 

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Outdated Small Cell Lung Cancer Clinical Approaches: Addressing Gaps in Patient Management

Outdated Small Cell Lung Cancer Clinical Approaches: Addressing Gaps in Patient Management

Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Dr. Seetharamu, what are the barriers to implementing patient-centered care in the management of small cell lung cancer, and what are we learning from the existing evidence?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah, thank you. It’s a great question. I would start by saying that I think the first thing is really limited treatment advances compared to other types of cancers and clinical trial access. So compared to other types of cancers, including non-small cell lung cancer, we have very, you know, fewer options. Patients, despite all the advances, the outcomes are still suboptimal. Many of our patients present with very advanced disease and have multiple other comorbid conditions. So it makes it difficult to deliver optimal care or to enroll patients in clinical trials.

In addition, we do know that palliative care improves outcomes in non-small cell lung cancer. We do not have this data as much in small cell, and there is a stigma around it. People do not avail palliative care options, which are perhaps most appropriate for patients with small cell lung cancer.

Lastly, I think there’s also streamlining the processes. We do have the low dose CT scan, lung cancer screening, fewer patients avail it. With increased availability, increased acceptance and increased uptake, probably we can see more small cell lung cancer cases in early stages that will ensure cure. Also, there are many of our patients with small cell lung cancer have lapses in supportive, you know, social support, and that’s something that we are working with.  There’s also quite a bit of disparity when we talk about small cell lung cancer, and that’s been extensively published.So delays from screening to diagnosis to treatment.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you so much, Dr. Seetharamu. So given those barriers that you just outlined for us, how can healthcare providers overcome those practice barriers to actually enhance care for patients facing small cell lung cancer?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

So I think there…I have a few ideas, a few suggestions. I think first and foremost, is to make sure that the screening program is well-adapted. We still see less than 10 percent of patients being screened, so that is something important. Hand in hand with that is tobacco cessation. So decreasing the incidence, early detection is number one and number two for sure. In addition to that, once patients are diagnosed and are presenting, you know, improving the, or having streamlined processes for diagnosis from the patients enter care to the time they start treatment, reducing the time to treatment is extremely important.

We are really kind of sitting on a time machine, you’re really trying to get things done in a very quick order. So streamlining the processes, whether the patient is in the hospital or presents as an outpatient. Lastly, making sure that clinical trials, if they’re available, making sure that patients are screened for it, making clinical trials available to patients, making criteria broader so that patients can be enrolled. And then ensuring that everyone within a particular health system or network is aware of recent advances, and patients get optimal care wherever they are located throughout the country.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you very much. I’m going to turn to you, Ms. Sandy. As a nurse practitioner in this space, what is your perspective regarding the primary barriers to accessing effective patient-centered care for small cell lung cancer? And then similarly, what are some strategies that you believe can be implemented to overcome these barriers?

Beth Sandy:  

Thanks, Dr. Rochester. I think Dr. Seetharamu covered a lot of the barriers really, its getting patients to treatment quickly. As we know, this disease is very aggressive. So, this is not a disease where a patient might say, “Well, I have a two week trip to Europe planned. I’d like to go there and then start treatment.” Actually, in non-small cell lung cancer maybe, but in small cell lung cancer, it’s so important to get them started very quickly on treatment because of the aggressive nature of the disease. And it is a very chemo-sensitive disease, so they may feel better very quickly.

One thing that we do in our practice is if we see that a patient is coming in who’s newly diagnosed with small cell lung cancer, whether it be extensive or limited stage, many times our nurse navigator is looking at this in advance and we’re pre-starting the chemotherapy before they even get there. Because many of these regimens are a three-day regimen, so we want to make sure that our next three days are available for infusion that we get this patient started right away. 

So sort of looking ahead can be really helpful, especially if the patient’s coming on a Thursday or Friday, we’re not open generally on the weekends to give chemo, so we’ll make sure that we get them scheduled that following week. Again, getting these patients to treatment very quickly can help them feel better quickly.


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HCP Roundtable: Overcoming Practice Barriers to Enhance Small Cell Lung Cancer Care

How can healthcare providers overcome practice barriers to enhance care for patients facing small cell lung cancer (SCLC)? Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu from Northwell Health and Nurse Practitioner Beth Sandy from Penn Medicine explore actionable clinical approaches and strategies to address the unique challenges in SCLC care.

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Transcript:

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Welcome to this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients Program. I’m Dr. Nicole Rochester, founder and CEO of Your GPS Doc. EPEP is a Patient Empowerment Network program that serves as a secure space for healthcare providers to learn techniques for improving physician-patient communication and to overcome practice barriers. How can healthcare providers overcome practice barriers to enhance care for patients facing small cell lung cancer? What strategies can be implemented to ensure that patients with extensive stage small cell lung cancer have access to participate in clinical trials and to receive cutting-edge therapies?

It is my privilege to be joined by Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu of Northwell Health. Dr. Seetharamu is an Associate Professor of Medicine at the Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra Northwell Health, and has established a reputation at the national level through her active involvement and leadership within influential oncology organizations that steer the direction of clinical cancer care and research across the United States and globally. Thank you so much for joining this EPEP program, Dr. Seetharamu.

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Thank you.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

It is also my honor to be joined by Ms. Beth Sandy, a thoracic oncology nurse practitioner at the University of Pennsylvania Abramson Cancer Center. In addition to regularly presenting at several national and international nursing and thoracic oncology meetings, Ms. Sandy has published in a number of peer-reviewed medical and nursing journals. Thank you so much for joining this EPEP program, Ms. Sandy.

Beth Sandy:

Thank you for having me.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

I’d like to start our discussion by talking about current practice barriers in small cell lung cancer care. So I’m going to start with you, Dr. Seetharamu. What are the barriers to implementing patient-centered care in the management of small cell lung cancer, and what are we learning from the existing evidence?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah, thank you. It’s a great question. I would start by saying that I think the first thing is really limited treatment advances compared to other types of cancers and clinical trial access. So compared to other types of cancers, including non-small cell lung cancer, we have very, you know, fewer options. Patients, despite all the advances, the outcomes are still suboptimal. Many of our patients present with very advanced disease and have multiple other comorbid conditions. So it makes it difficult to deliver optimal care or to enroll patients in clinical trials. In addition, we do know that palliative care improves outcomes in non-small cell lung cancer. We do not have this data as much in small cell, and there is a stigma around it. People do not avail palliative care options, which are perhaps most appropriate for patients with small cell lung cancer.

Lastly, I think there’s also streamlining the processes. We do have the low dose CT scan, lung cancer screening, fewer patients avail it. With increased availability, increased acceptance and increased uptake, probably we can see more small cell lung cancer cases in early stages that will ensure cure.

Also, there are many of our patients with small cell lung cancer have lapses in supportive, you know, social support, and that’s something that we are working with. There’s also quite a bit of disparity when we talk about small cell lung cancer, and that’s been extensively published. So delays from screening to diagnosis to treatment.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you so much, Dr. Seetharamu. So given those barriers that you just outlined for us, how can healthcare providers overcome those practice barriers to actually enhance care for patients facing small cell lung cancer?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

So I think there…I have a few ideas, a few suggestions. I think first and foremost, is to make sure that the screening program is well-adapted. We still see less than 10 percent of patients being screened, so that is something important. Hand in hand with that is tobacco cessation. So decreasing the incidence, early detection is number one and number two for sure. In addition to that, once patients are diagnosed and are presenting, you know, improving the, or having streamlined processes for diagnosis from the patients enter care to the time they start treatment, reducing the time to treatment is extremely important.

We are really kind of sitting on a time machine, you’re really trying to get things done in a very quick order. So streamlining the processes, whether the patient is in the hospital or presents as an outpatient. Lastly, making sure that clinical trials, if they’re available, making sure that patients are screened for it, making clinical trials available to patients, making criteria broader so that patients can be enrolled. And then ensuring that everyone within a particular health system or network is aware of recent advances, and patients get optimal care wherever they are located throughout the country.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you very much. I’m going to turn to you, Ms. Sandy. As a nurse practitioner in this space, what is your perspective regarding the primary barriers to accessing effective patient-centered care for small cell lung cancer? And then similarly, what are some strategies that you believe can be implemented to overcome these barriers?

Beth Sandy:

Thanks, Dr. Rochester. I think Dr. Seetharamu covered a lot of the barriers really, it’s getting patients to treatment quickly. As we know, this disease is very aggressive. So, this is not a disease where a patient might say, “Well, I have a two week trip to Europe planned. I’d like to go there and then start treatment.” Actually, in non-small cell lung cancer maybe, but in small cell lung cancer, it’s so important to get them started very quickly on treatment because of the aggressive nature of the disease. And it is a very chemo-sensitive disease, so they may feel better very quickly.

One thing that we do in our practice is if we see that a patient is coming in who’s newly diagnosed with small cell lung cancer, whether it be extensive or limited stage, many times our nurse navigator is looking at this in advance and we’re pre-starting the chemotherapy before they even get there. Because many of these regimens are a three-day regimen, so we want to make sure that our next three days are available for infusion that we get this patient started right away.  So sort of looking ahead can be really helpful, especially if the patient’s coming on a Thursday or Friday, we’re not open generally on the weekends to give chemo, so we’ll make sure that we get them scheduled that following week. Again, getting these patients to treatment very quickly can help them feel better quickly.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wonderful, thank you both. So I’m going to go back to you, Dr. Seetharamu. What are the gaps in current research regarding patient-centered care in small cell lung cancer, and how can these gaps be addressed?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah, I think I alluded to this a little earlier, but the…mean, this is kind of a pitch for funding agencies. I think the funding, first of all, it starts there. I think the funding that is available for other types of cancers perhaps is not so much for small cell. Despite decades of extensive research, we are still kind of stuck in the same regimen that we used to use decades ago, with a few modifications. So, first of all, novel treatment ideas, novel treatment regimens definitely can be hugely beneficial for these patients.

Secondly, it is also making sure that patients are actually able to get enrolled in the studies. A lot of these studies are overly exclusionary for reasons that it shouldn’t be. And, for example, if a patient receives a treatment as inpatient, like Ms. Sandy said, a lot of our patients get treated in the hospital, and they get excluded from the first-line regimens many times. So that’s something that can be accommodated. Clinical trials should be tailored around real world experience, not just based on what might be beneficial in preclinical models or some early experience. That’s the second thing.

Thirdly, I think small cell lung cancer, while we use the same term, I think it’s a heterogeneous disease. Using biomarkers to kind of stratify patients or subgroup patients, and then tailor regimens specific to, for example, when a transformed small cell lung cancer, when non-small cell lung cancer transforms to small cell, it’s still small cell lung cancer. From a histological perspective, it looks very similar, biologically it’s a very different disease. So I think it is important to kind of stratify or differentiate those subgroups and then create clinical trials that are more specific, you know, patient-centric like you mentioned. And I think lastly, mostly it’s important to make sure that the disparities are addressed. The socioeconomic disparities, racial barriers are addressed while we are talking about small cell lung cancer research. I think it should be an integral part of every clinical trial.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Absolutely. Thank you for highlighting that, Dr. Seetharamu. So, Sandy, we’ve been talking about the barriers that patients face with regard to treatment. Can you speak to some of the obstacles or barriers that are faced by healthcare providers with regard to treatment for small cell lung cancer?

Beth Sandy:

Yeah. Well, there are a couple ways to look at it. First, if you just look at a clinical trial perspective, sometimes it’s hard for us to enroll patients with small cell lung cancer for several reasons. You know, when we enroll in a clinical trial, a lot of times we need to wait for a slot to open. Well, we don’t have time to wait for a slot when they have small cell lung cancer. Again, it’s a very aggressive disease that’s rapidly moving. So we run into this barrier all the time here because they’ll say, “Well, I have a slot that opened up in three or four weeks or four weeks.” I don’t want to wait that long to treat my patient. So I think when we design these trials, we have to think about those kinds of things.

Another point of putting patients on clinical trials is a lot of trial ineligibility criteria is for patients with brain metastases, but in small cell lung cancer, we know that like up to 75 percent of them are going to develop brain mets over the lifetime of their disease. So it’s not really a real world trial if we exclude patients with brain metastases. So we need to design our trials in a good way.

There are a lot of other barriers that we end up facing. Some of the treatments for small cell lung cancer, especially a very new treatment that’s a BiTE therapy, a bispecific T-cell engager, is very hard to administer. It requires an overnight admission for the first two treatments, it has taken us actually a pretty long time to operationalize how we were trying to give this, so it’s not easy. And we finally have figured out how to give this, but this is a drug that holds a lot of promise for our patients, but it is hard for us to administer, and it’s hard for patients as well, because then they have to say, “Oh, I have to block off an entire day for this.”

So, some of these treatments are not easy. Most treatments for small cell lung cancer are not fancy targeted therapies that can minimize toxicity. These are chemotherapies that can cause nausea, fatigue, lowering of blood counts, the majority of the treatments. So if our patients aren’t healthy, robust, and able to deliver, or we can deliver the treatment, but they’re not able to handle the treatment, that’s also worrisome and can cause a barrier for us. So they’re not easy treatments. We need to really do our best to help support the patient and help figure out from an operationalization, there I made up a word, [laughter] but standpoint on how we can administer these safely, but in a quick, efficient way to these patients.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you, Ms. Sandy. So both of you have really done a great job elaborating the many barriers. The barriers that patients face, the barriers that healthcare providers face. Are there any tactical strategies or things that either of you or your institutions have done to actually address some of these barriers, some of the challenges that you all have mentioned?

Beth Sandy:

I mean, for us, our nurse navigator is huge. She is a dedicated lung cancer nurse navigator. She’s looking at these patients in advance, when they’re new patients and really trying to say, okay, if they have small cell, we need to get them in quickly. You know, if our new patient wait is two weeks, she’ll say, “Well, this one needs to be prioritized. We need to see them within a week.” She’ll say, “We need to make sure that we have the ability to treat them within a week. We want to really get on top of that quickly.” So that’s been, I think for us, one of the biggest helps with small cell lung cancer.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Wonderful. You have anything to add, Dr. Seetharamu?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah, I mean, it’s… similarly I think our navigator program is extremely helpful. In addition to that, I think, I know with the bispecific that was mentioned, you know, the tarlatamab-dlle (Imdelltra), we have a process in place, where it’s very streamlined, patients get admitted. The whole protocol is in place for admission and then subsequent treatment as outpatient.  With larger centers where there are multiple, larger institutions with multiple centers that might be a little smaller and not able to monitor patients while they’re receiving this treatment, we have adapted this approach where the first two treatments are given at the main hub, and that’s also been adapted by a few other institutions in the neighborhood where they refer the patients to us just for those first two infusions and when patients are settled and ready to continue the treatment, they’re able to continue it in a more community-based setting.

So that’s something I think that can be done in those regions where patients are referred to places where you can call hubs where these treatments can be initiated and then continued in their regional places so not to inconvenience the patients.

I think for this particular cohort of patients, social work involvement is extremely helpful, in addition to addressing the support systems, transportation assistance, financial support systems, and then involving palliative care early on has been something that has been extremely helpful. This is a multidisciplinary disease, despite that the majority of the patients are on systemic treatment, it is a multidisciplinary disease. We have multiple, we touch minor patients, touch multiple departments. And again, the role of nurse navigator is extremely helpful, because they can help make sure the patients are not inundated by these appointments.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you both. Thank you very much for sharing that. So we’re going to shift a little bit and talk about strategies and innovations that may offer enhanced care for patients and families facing small cell lung cancer. We know that survival outcomes in small cell lung cancer remain challenging as both of you have pointed out, particularly for those with extensive stage small cell lung cancer despite incremental improvements in treatment strategies. For your colleagues that are watching this program, what are some strategies and innovations that may offer improved survival outcomes? Now I’ll start with you, Dr. Seetharamu.

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

I think having your group in place, identifying the providers that are dedicated to this disease. Making sure there are processes in place from early diagnosis through the treatments and seeing multiple providers is in place. Making sure that every treatment, there’s a pathway attached to it, there’s a protocol attached to it so that we are not scrambling last minute. Like Ms. Sandy said, it’s the same issue. It’s a three-day regimen. The first line, we want to make sure that, you know, the treatment starts. We are open on Saturdays too.

So, you know, it has to be Monday through Thursdays. You know, simple things as that may become very challenging. In patients with the brain metastases, making sure that they see the providers also in a very timely fashion. Sometimes the urgency may not be realized by other providers, because they’re not used to just seeing small cell lung cancer patients. Just making sure that that is communicated with teams. Yeah. I mean, just streamlining the processes as much as possible. Empowering the patients to understand their disease and making sure that they ask the right questions and be, you know, willful, you know, like complete participants, partners in the care, are some of the strategies that I can think of.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you, Dr. Seetharamu. And certainly with this being in Empowering Providers to Empower Patients, we love that you included that, having the patients as partners. Do you have anything you’d like to add, Dr. Sandy…do you have anything you’d like to add, Ms. Sandy?

Beth Sandy:

You know, I think looking ahead for clinical trials, new drugs, it’s been really hard in small cell. We don’t have nearly the advances that we’ve seen in non-small cell lung cancer as far as any targeted therapies. Dr. Seetharamu talked about this earlier is that maybe we could figure out some of these different subgroups by looking at their pathology and seeing if some of them may respond differently to certain agents. I’m hopeful about some new drugs that are coming down in the pipeline.

There is an anti-TIGIT agent combined with immunotherapy that looks hopeful, that could produce some good outcomes. Combining immunotherapy drugs, combining them with chemotherapy, you know, potentially down the line we’ll see some of these drugs that will get approvals in small cell lung cancer and improve some of our progression-free survivals and hopefully overall survivals. So just continuing to enroll patients on studies. Have studies designed to fit this patient population, which we’ve significantly lacked in the past 30 years in small cell lung cancer.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you. Thank you, Ms. Sandy. And you brought up the clinical trials, and so on that same topic, Dr. Seetharamu, do you have anything to add with regard to really improving access to clinical trials for patients with small cell lung cancer.

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah. I think bringing clinical trials to the communities is perhaps the biggest way to do it. You know, patients with small cell, many can travel, but there are many that cannot.  So it’s important to understand that making it easier for patients to know what trials are available. Right now the options that we have, the websites that we have, it’s hard even for a provider to kind of navigate through it. Making it easier. Advocacy groups, you know, ensuring that patients are tied to advocacy groups, because they get a lot of information from these groups. It’s important. And I encourage patients to join these groups, because it empowers them and kind of unifies their voice.

There are clinical trials that are looking at doing labs at home or in their local centers, so they don’t have to travel all the way to the main center to get the labs done. That can be a huge help for patients. And again, making sure that clinical trials, when they’re designed, they are adaptable to real world, you know. And Ms. Sandy brought this up before, we don’t want trials that only address the cream of the…you know, like just a small proportion of patients. It should be really viable for the larger community. Yeah. I mean, these are some…I am sure there are many other things that can be done, but I think this would be a good start.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

As we move to our final topic, I’m going to go to you, Ms. Sandy. We’re going to talk about outdated clinical approaches. How can interdisciplinary care teams and integrated care models be optimized to better address the specific needs and gaps in the management of patients? And what are some successful examples of these models in practice?

Beth Sandy:

So when I think of outdated clinical approaches, I think of things like older chemotherapy regimens or ways that we used to manage toxicity that have changed. So, for example, when I started doing this 20 to 25 years ago, we had two drugs, and that was it. There was nothing else really, and you could throw some other chemotherapies, but, you know, really now we have approved agents that have improved survival, so we need to make sure we’re using the right thing. And then I think the other flip side of that is our ability to manage toxicity. Again, we have much better ways to manage things like nausea, things like neutropenia, even fatigue.  We have better ways of predicting and managing these things now than what we used to have.  So we need to make sure that our supportive care is also maximized so that the patients can stay on treatment, because small cell lung cancer is one of the diseases where treatment is really important, that they’re getting as much of the chemotherapy as possible and on time.

Whereas in non-small cell lung cancer, I may be a little bit more, you know, okay with them taking a trip or being delayed or things. But because this is such a chemo-sensitive disease, it’s really important for us, if they want to be aggressive, to make sure that we are maximizing our toxicity management. Otherwise, they’re not going to be able to get these treatments.  And that’s gonna definitely worsen their outcomes. I think also is discussing goals of care with patients. And I think there’s been a big push in the past 10 years with the early palliative care integration into our lung cancer practices. This is another thing that’s really important here, that we are having real conversations with our patients about the goals of their care. With extensive stage small cell lung cancer, our average survivals are a year or two even with treatment.

So, you know, I don’t need to say to a patient on the first visit, like, you know, this is the exact numbers, because I don’t want patients to perseverate over, you know, exact numbers. But I also think it’s important to say, you know, this is something that we can’t cure, and we’re going to try to manage it as long as possible, but it’s an aggressive disease.  So, you know, what are your…what’s important to you? What are the goals that you would like to see? And that would give an open-ended question for patients to say, well, I’d like to be alive in 10 years for this. And when they say something like that, that might be an opportunity to say, well, I hope that that can happen, but I’m really worried with what we know about this disease, that that might not be, you know, realistic. So what do you think in the short term your goals are?

And that may be an open-ended question too, where they might say, you know, I don’t want to be sick or in the hospital. That’s really important that I’m at home, or that I can do this or that. So this is a disease where we’ve been really well-trained just in the past five to 10 years about how to have these discussions with patients that I would say 20 years ago when I started, we weren’t, I don’t think personally I was as good at having these conversations, and I don’t think we were as well-trained in the profession at this. And we found that this has been extremely helpful for a good patient-provider relationship as well as patient-centered care when they’re making decisions along with us.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you, Ms. Sandy. And certainly as we talk about how to empower our patients, that shared decision-making that you talked about and incorporating goals of care is incredibly important. Dr. Seetharamu, do you have anything to add with regard to shared clinical decision-making or any other advances or things that address outdated treatment?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah, I can’t emphasize how important it is to have the goals of care discussion, but I think, you know, even though the treatment regimen has not changed for first-line much, there have been some nuances to it, right?  We are routinely including immunotherapy in first line. We now have some supportive care. Trilaciclib (Cosela) is something that we use for patients to help support and prevent admissions. These are things that may not be done, and there are some insurance barriers. Trust me, we are on the phone a lot of times that we shouldn’t be, you know, trying to get something approved despite clear benefit and FDA approvals. So, yeah, that’s a barrier that I should have spoken about, probably number one.

But that aside, I think, you know, that’s one thing that we see that is done a little differently in the community. I spoke about tarlatamab-dlle (Imdelltra). You know, many people just jump to different treatments because they just feel like it’s not…they’re not able to offer these newer treatments because of inpatient monitoring, what have you. So they may just start from a Platinum-etoposide to giving them, again, the same regimen or jumping to, you know, topotecan (Hycamtin), which we know that, you know, can…there can be better regimens than that. There are some newer agents that people may not…I’ve seen that in underutilization of some of the newer. We don’t have a lot of approvals in this space, but even the ones that have been approved, there’s relative underutilization of it. So I think education of providers in the community setting is helpful.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you so much. Well, it’s time to wrap up our roundtable. I have learned a lot. I’ve really enjoyed this conversation with the two of you. And so now it’s time for closing thoughts. So I’ll go to you, Ms. Sandy, what would you like to be your takeaway message? What’s one of the most important things for our audience?

Beth Sandy:

I think one of the most important things is don’t write off your patients with small cell lung cancer. You know, it’s an aggressive disease. It can be hard to manage. They have a lot of comorbid conditions, but some of these treatments can work well, especially the newer agents. And so, you know, really working with your patient to keep them on therapy, but while at the same time understanding what their goals of care are and continuing that discussion throughout your patient-provider journey, and continuing to understand what their support systems are, what is important to them, and then that will help you and the patient make these treatment decisions along the way.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Thank you, Ms. Sandy. And what about you, Dr. Seetharamu, what are your closing thoughts?

Dr. Nagashree Seetharamu:

Yeah, I agree with Ms. Sandy on everything that she said. I think emphasizing the importance of multifaceted approach to overcome practice barriers, from reducing stigma and improving access to diverse patient populations, improving clinical trial inclusivity, and closing healthcare disparities perhaps are top strategies. And then, you know, for future, it’s just a call to action, you know, for improving funding for clinical trials and to also, you know, try to see if there are programs that can mitigate disparities that we see.

And then we spoke about stratifying patients, you know, making it a more personalized care, just as we do for non-small cell lung cancer these days with all the novel information that we have so far, and making sure that every patient, no matter where they are, who they are, receive optimal care that they should.

Dr. Nicole Rochester:

Well, thank you both again, Dr. Seetharamu, Ms. Sandy, thank you for this incredibly informative conversation. And thank you again for tuning in to this Empowering Providers to Empower Patients, Patient Empowerment Network program. I’m Dr. Nicole Rochester. Thanks for watching.


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