Systematic review of lung cancer in pregnancy reports treatment patterns and outcomes
This is a systematic review of lung cancer diagnosed during pregnancy, synthesizing 96 unique cases from international databases searched from 1948 through March 2024. The review focused on treatment patterns and maternal-fetal outcomes.
Key findings include a mean maternal age of 32.9 years, with 65% of cases at Stage III-IV. Actionable driver alterations were present in 58.9% of cases, with ALK rearrangements being the most common at 32.9% and EGFR mutations present in 21.4%. Chemotherapy was administered during pregnancy in 22.8% of cases, with a mean gestational age at initiation of 21.8 weeks. Targeted therapies were initiated postpartum in 30 patients (31.6% of the cohort).
Maternal-fetal outcomes showed live births in 71.9% of cases, term delivery in 46.9%, preterm delivery in 25.0%, pregnancy termination in 17.7%, and fetal demise in 1.0%. Advanced maternal disease stage was significantly associated with adverse fetal outcomes (p < 0.0001).
The authors acknowledge limitations including small sample size, heterogeneity of reporting, and lack of long-term follow-up. They note that findings should be interpreted with caution and that major congenital toxicity was not a clear signal in this data.
Practice relevance emphasizes multidisciplinary management, routine molecular profiling, early diagnosis, and coordinated maternal-fetal care, with a call for international registries and consensus guidelines.