Patients with lung cancer, a malignant tumor of the lung originating in the trachea (including trachea and bronchi), and in the presence of brain metastases from cancer cells may present with neurological symptoms such as headache, dizziness, and abnormal mental behavior.
Patients in this situation with advanced lung cancer with brain metastases, who have lost the opportunity for surgical treatment, often have a poor prognosis, even with aggressive treatment measures, but can be treated to improve symptoms, reduce pain, and to some extent extend survival. If it is the 1st time to receive chemotherapy, you can choose a two-drug chemotherapy regimen containing platinum drugs, such as cisplatin, carboplatin, nedaplatin, etc. For patients who are in good health, they will also combine with another chemotherapy drug, because different chemotherapy drugs have different mechanisms of action, which can attack and kill cancer cells from multiple pathways to achieve better therapeutic effects. If the lesion is found to progress during or after chemotherapy, then it is necessary to switch to another chemotherapy drug or use molecularly targeted therapy drugs, which can also be combined with neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimens, and other available treatment options include radiotherapy and bioimmunotherapy.