Metastatic Trajectories in Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer Guide Local and Systemic Therapies
Cet article examine comment l'utilisation de nouveaux biomarqueurs (ADN circulant, données radiomiques...) et la compréhension des mécanismes biologiques impliqués dans l'hétérogénéité tumorale permettent de suivre l'évolution des métastases du cancer du poumon non à petites cellules et de mieux personnaliser les traitements
Advances in systemic therapy have improved outcomes for metastatic non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), yet resistance and progression remain nearly universal. Local therapies such as radiotherapy, surgery, and image-guided ablation can extend disease control in selected patients, but existing classifications—including dynamic models of oligometastatic disease—assign a single state per patient and do not capture lesion-level heterogeneity. We introduce the concept of metastatic trajectories—the spatiotemporal dynamics of response and progression across lesions, organs, and patients—as a framework to characterize intrapatient heterogeneity and inform adaptive treatment strategies. Dimensions of metastatic trajectories include the magnitude and homogeneity of response, mechanisms of resistance, organotropism, and the pattern, site, extent, and pace of progression. This framework shifts the focus from overall disease states to individual lesion behavior over time, enabling reactive strategies based on observed trajectories and anticipatory strategies based on predicted ones. We review the biological foundations of intrapatient heterogeneity—including genomic diversification, nongenetic plasticity, and tumor-microenvironmental adaptation—that drive divergent lesion evolution and treatment response. Emerging biomarkers such as circulating tumor DNA and radiomic signatures, together with integrative genomic and functional imaging approaches, may allow tracking and prediction of trajectory evolution. Standardized reporting parameters are proposed to ensure consistent documentation and facilitate validation across studies. Integrating trajectory-based assessment into clinical practice could refine patient selection for local and systemic therapy, enable biology-informed adaptation of treatment timing and intensity, and provide a foundation for next-generation clinical trials aimed at precision management of metastatic NSCLC.
Journal of Clinical Oncology , résumé, 2026