Treatment for lung cancer
A team of doctors and other professionals discuss the best treatment and care for you. They are called a multidisciplinary team (MDT).
Most people are referred to a lung cancer MDT. You might go to a different hospital if there isn't a specialist MDT at your local hospital.
The team usually includes:
a respiratory physician
a specialist surgeon
cancer specialists (oncologists) who specialise in treating cancer with cancer drugs (medical oncologist) and radiotherapy (clinical oncologist)
a specialist cancer nurse (also called clinical nurse specialist)
a pathologist (an expert who examines any cancer or tissue the surgeon removes)
a pharmacist
a radiologist (who looks at your scans and x-rays)
a dietician (who offers support and advice about eating and drinking)
The MDT may also include health professionals who look after people with metastatic (advanced) lung cancer. They can help with symptom control. They include:
the palliative care team
a clinical nurse specialist for palliative care
Your treatment depends on:
the type of lung cancer
where your cancer is
how far it has grown or spread (the stage)
your general health and level of fitness
Deciding about treatment can be difficult when you have metastatic cancer.
It helps to understand:
what treatment can do for you
how it might affect your quality of life
what side effects does it have
Your doctor or specialist nurse can talk to you about the benefits and possible side effects. You can ask them questions.
You might also find it helps to talk things over with a close relative, a friend or a counsellor at the hospital.
Your doctor might offer you a choice of treatments. Discuss each treatment with them and ask how they can control any side effects. This helps you make the right decision for you. You also need to think about the other factors involved in each treatment, such as:
whether you need extra appointments
if you need more tests
the distance you need to travel to and from hospital
You might have to make further choices as your situation changes. It helps to find out as much as possible each time. You can stop a treatment whenever you want to if you find it too much to cope with.
You may decide not to have cancer treatments, such as chemotherapy. But you can still have medicines to help control symptoms, such as sickness or pain.
Your doctor or nurse will explain what could help you. You can also ask them to refer you to a local symptom control team to give you support at home.
Find out about support when you have lung cancer
The main treatments are:
chemotherapy
radiotherapy
surgery
chemoradiotherapy (chemotherapy with radiotherapy)
radiotherapy to the brain (prophylactic cranial irradiation – also called PCI)
chemotherapy with or without immunotherapy
You have one or more of these treatments. This depends on the stage of your cancer and also how well the treatment works.
Limited disease means your cancer is only in one lung. It might be in lymph nodes nearby.
The main treatment for limited disease small cell lung cancer is chemotherapy. You usually then have radiotherapy to the chest.
If you are fit enough, you might have chemoradiotherapy. This means that you have chemotherapy at the same time as radiotherapy.
If your cancer is at a very early stage, you might be able to have surgery to remove the part of the lung containing the cancer. This is called a lobectomy. But surgery isn’t used very often for small cell lung cancer. If you do have surgery, you usually have chemotherapy afterwards and might also have radiotherapy.
After you finish treatment, you might have radiotherapy to your head if the cancer in your lung has stopped growing and you are well enough. Radiotherapy to the head is called prophylactic cranial radiotherapy (PCR) and it aims to kill any cancer cells that might have spread to the brain but are too small to see on scans.
Read about lung cancer treatments
Extensive disease means your cancer has spread outside your lung, either within your chest or to other parts of your body. Cancer that has spread to other parts of the body is also called metastatic (advanced) cancer.
Treatment aims to control the cancer for as long as possible and help with symptoms.
You usually have chemotherapy with or without immunotherapy. If the chemotherapy works well, you might have radiotherapy to your lungs afterwards.
After treatment you might also have radiotherapy to your head if the cancer has stopped growing and you are well enough. Radiotherapy to the head is called prophylactic cranial radiotherapy (PCR). It aims to kill any cancer cells that might have spread to the brain but are too small to see on scans.
To control symptoms, you might also have other treatments such as:
radiotherapy
internal radiotherapy (brachytherapy)
laser treatment
freezing the tumour (cryotherapy)
a rigid tube called a stent to keep the airway open
stereotactic ablative body radiotherapy (SABR) for cancer that has spread to one or a few distant sites, also called oligometastatic disease
a rigid tube (called a stent) to keep a big vein called the superior vena cava open
Read about treatments for metastatic cancer
Doctors are always trying to improve treatments, and reduce side effects. Your doctor might ask you to participate in a clinical trial as part of your treatment. This might be to test a new treatment or to look at different combinations of existing treatments.
Your doctor will tell you if there are any trials that you can enter.
Last reviewed: 09 Feb 2023
Next review due: 09 Feb 2026
Your treatment depends on several factors. These include what type of lung cancer you have, how big it is and whether it has spread (the stage). It also depends on your general health.
Lung cancer starts in the windpipe (trachea), the main airway (bronchus) or the lung tissue. Cancer that starts in the lung is called primary lung cancer.
The stage of a cancer tells you how big it is and whether it has spread. The type tells which type of cell the cancer started from.
Metastatic lung cancer means that the cancer has spread from where it started in the lung to other parts of the body. It is also called advanced lung cancer.
There is support available during and after treatment to help you cope with lung cancer. Find out who can support you and what they can do.

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