1. Advanced patients with EGFR mutation should be treated with targeted therapy as early as possible In advanced non-small cell lung cancer, some patients have a specific gene mutation, which will cause cancer cells to proliferate indefinitely and easily invade outward to destroy the function of normal cells. This specific gene mutation is like a target, and targeted therapy is to attack this target. In advanced non-small cell lung cancer, there are more gene mutations as targets, the most common one is EGFR gene mutation, and the drug to attack this mutation is called EGFR-TKI (epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor). The current Chinese version of lung cancer guidelines approves that patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer with EGFR gene mutations need to be treated with EGFR-TKI as early as possible. Studies have shown that patients have a median progression-free survival of up to 13 months after EGFR-TKi treatment. In other words, when the time from the start of treatment to the appearance of tumor expansion and metastasis (i.e., progression-free survival) was counted for each patient, the cumulative time corresponding to 50% of patients was 13 months, meaning that 50% of patients could have their tumors not progress within 13 months. In addition, the median overall survival of patients was 27 months. 2. Adenocarcinoma is an advantageous population for using targeted therapy Theoretically, genetic screening is used to detect the presence of specific genetic mutations in patients in order to decide whether to carry out targeted therapy. However, the survey found that only 20% of non-small cell lung cancer patients in China did EGFR gene mutation testing in 2012 due to perception, cost, and difficulty in obtaining materials, and 40% of the doctors interviewed said that their hospitals could not perform EGFR testing. So, how to treat without knowing whether there is a gene mutation or not? In fact, non-small cell lung cancer includes squamous carcinoma, adenocarcinoma, and large cell carcinoma. In China, the EGFR mutation rate of lung adenocarcinoma patients is about 50, 2%, which means that 1 out of 2 lung adenocarcinoma patients has EGFR mutation. The mutation rate is even higher among non-smokers with lung adenocarcinoma, which is about 60.7%. Therefore, Asian, female, nonsmoking lung adenocarcinoma patients are also considered to be an advantageous group for targeted therapy, and this group has a longer time to have their disease controlled and tumors not progressing after treatment with erlotinib.