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Current Perspective| Volume 45, ISSUE 7, P1111-1116, May 2009

TNM: Therapeutically Not Mandatory

Published:March 31, 2009DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2009.02.020

      Abstract

      Cancer survival may be inversely related to the speed at which a primary tumour grows and disseminates. Assessment of prognosis using surgical and/or radiological definition of disease extent, i.e. staging, has thus become a standard intervention in newly diagnosed patients, with the most popular framework being the tumour-node-metastasis (TNM) system. However, increasing use of biomarkers – non-TNM factors that predict therapeutic benefit, rather than adverse disease outcome – has weakened the decision-making dominance of TNM. This shift from risk-led to benefit-led practice is now starting to blur the time-honoured qualitative distinction between curable (M0, early stage, adjuvant) and incurable (M1, early metastatic, palliative) disease treatment strategies; the same biologic drug strategy may improve average survival outcomes by similar increments for two patients, one of whom is ‘adjuvant’ and the other ‘metastatic’. Plausibly, then, biomarker-positive patients presenting with high-TNM (M1) disease may enjoy the same, if not more, disease-free and/or overall survival benefit as conventional low-TNM (M0) patients when treated with standard adjuvant interventions. Conversely, M0 patients concerned by quality-of-life issues such as alopecia may in future be able to choose better-tolerated personalised drug regimens similar to those now used with survival benefit in palliative settings, even if such adjuvant regimens have not yet been validated by level 1 data. To these ends, a modernised decision-oriented disease staging system called METS (molecular/extra-primary/tumour/symptoms) is presented here.

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