May 19, 2021
Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer related deaths for men and second for women (after breast cancer). Worldwide, 1.8 million diagnoses and 1.6 million deaths occur annually.1 While incidences have been decreasing over recent decades and advances in diagnosis and treatments are being made in cancer as a whole, only 17 percent of patients diagnosed with lung cancer will survive five years leaving an opportunity for new therapies to make a large impact on this population of patients. The combination of surgery, traditional chemotherapies, targeted therapies, radiation, and immunotherapy have been shown to be beneficial treatment options; and development of novel therapies and/or combinations continue.