Infiltrative lung adenocarcinoma is a stage of lung cancer development that is malignant and extremely harmful to patients. The diagnosis indicates that the patient’s cancer has reached an intermediate or advanced stage. It is relatively difficult to treat.
Infiltrative lung adenocarcinoma develops mainly in the bronchi and then grows infiltratively into the surrounding tissues and forms nodules or masses, usually monogenic, isolated lesions, which usually have blurred borders and uneven margins with lobulated burrs. In layman’s terms, when lung cancer has reached the stage of invasive lung adenocarcinoma, the cancer cells have already infiltrated into the interstitial cells and have spread, so surgical resection cannot achieve the purpose of treatment. It is also possible to use herbal therapy for adjuvant treatment.
Left lung biopsy is an important tool to check for lung lesions, and once signs of invasive lung adenocarcinoma are detected, patients need to be treated as soon as possible.