New KCC City Clinic —  New Baneshwor →
🇳🇵 नेपालीमा पढ्नुहोस् — फोक्सोको क्यान्सर उपचार
Advanced Thoracic Oncology Care

Advanced Lung Cancer Treatment
Available in Nepal at Kathmandu Cancer Center

A persistent cough, blood in sputum, or a CT scan showing a lung shadow can be frightening. The good news is that complete lung cancer treatment is now available in Nepal — including surgery, chemotherapy, precision radiotherapy, targeted therapy, and immunotherapy.

Molecular Testing Targeted Therapy Immunotherapy IMRT / VMAT
!
Do not ignore long-standing cough or blood in sputum Many lung cancer patients in Nepal come late because symptoms are mistaken for infection, smoking cough, or asthma. Early diagnosis gives more treatment options and better results.

Lung Cancer Treatment — At a Glance

Is it treatable?
Yes. Lung cancer is treatable in many stages using surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, targeted tablets, and immunotherapy. Even stage 4 disease can often be controlled for long periods with modern medicines.
Main types
Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) — most common  |  Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) — faster growing but often responsive to medicines
Before treatment
Advanced patients often need molecular testing to see whether special targeted medicines or immunotherapy can work better than routine chemotherapy.
Modern medicines
Many patients now qualify for oral targeted tablets or immunotherapy infusions with fewer side effects than traditional chemotherapy.
Radiation role
Precision radiotherapy is used for local control, symptom relief, and in selected cases with curative intent along with chemotherapy.
KCC timeline
From consultation to biopsy review, molecular workup, and treatment planning — usually completed within 10 to 14 days.
Need guidance in Nepali? Read the Nepali Lung Cancer page here.
Understanding the Disease

Types of Lung Cancer

Lung cancer is not one single disease. The exact type found on biopsy decides which treatment will work best. This is why biopsy confirmation is always necessary before starting treatment.

Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)

This is the most common type of lung cancer. Many patients with this type can receive surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, targeted therapy, or immunotherapy depending on stage and test results.

  • Common in both smokers and non-smokers
  • Often slower growing than small cell type
  • Some patients have mutations that respond to oral targeted medicines

Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC)

This type usually grows faster and often spreads early, but it can respond quickly to chemotherapy and radiation. Treatment should begin without unnecessary delay after proper diagnosis.

Important for Families to Know

Hearing the words “lung cancer” is deeply unsettling for any family. But not every diagnosis means the same outcome. Some patients are diagnosed at a curable stage, and many others can still receive treatment that controls disease, improves breathing, and adds meaningful time with better quality of life.

The first step is proper staging, biopsy review, and deciding whether surgery, chemotherapy, targeted medicine, or immunotherapy is most suitable.

KCC Approach

We Do Not Start Treatment Blindly

Every lung cancer patient is evaluated by oncology specialists using:

  • Biopsy confirmation
  • CT / PET staging review
  • Molecular testing where needed
  • Performance status assessment
  • Multidisciplinary treatment planning

This helps avoid starting the wrong treatment too early.

Modern Lung Cancer Care

Targeted Therapy & Immunotherapy in Nepal

Lung cancer treatment has changed significantly in the last decade. Today, many advanced patients are no longer limited to conventional chemotherapy alone. Depending on tumour testing, they may qualify for more precise and often better tolerated medicines.

Precision Medicine

Treatment Based on Your Tumour Biology

Before deciding treatment for advanced lung cancer, KCC may perform molecular and biomarker testing on the biopsy sample. This helps identify whether your cancer is suitable for targeted tablets or immunotherapy rather than routine chemotherapy alone.

Option 1

Targeted Therapy

Some lung cancers carry special mutations that can be controlled using oral medicines taken at home. These tablets directly attack the growth signal of the cancer and are often better tolerated than IV chemotherapy.

Option 2

Immunotherapy

Immunotherapy helps the body's immune system recognize and fight cancer cells. In selected patients, it can significantly improve control and survival, either alone or together with chemotherapy.

Why proper testing matters before chemotherapy

Some lung cancer patients may benefit more from targeted tablets or immunotherapy than from standard chemotherapy. Starting treatment without proper review can mean missing a better first-line option. This is why KCC reviews pathology and advanced markers before final treatment planning whenever indicated.

Cancer Medicines

Chemotherapy for Lung Cancer

Chemotherapy is still an important treatment for many lung cancer patients. It may be used alone, combined with immunotherapy, before surgery, after surgery, or together with radiotherapy depending on the stage and biopsy findings.

When chemotherapy is commonly used

For advanced lung cancer when targeted therapy is not suitable
Used to slow disease, reduce tumour burden, and improve symptoms
Combined with immunotherapy
A common modern first-line option in many stage 4 patients
Before surgery in selected locally advanced cases
To shrink the tumour and improve surgical success
After surgery in node-positive disease
To reduce the chance of recurrence
Along with radiotherapy
Often used in stage III patients for stronger local control

Chemotherapy at Kathmandu Cancer Center

  • Dedicated chemotherapy day care facility
  • Oncology nurse monitoring during infusion
  • Pre-medication for nausea and allergic reactions
  • Routine blood tests before every cycle
  • Supportive medicines for low blood count and appetite loss
  • Treatment scheduling suitable for outstation patients

Will chemotherapy be very difficult?

It is natural to feel anxious when chemotherapy is advised. Many people still imagine severe vomiting, unbearable weakness, or constant hospitalization. In reality, supportive medicines and modern oncology protocols have made chemotherapy far more manageable than it used to be, and most side effects can be anticipated and controlled.

Precision Radiation

Radiotherapy for Lung Cancer

Radiotherapy uses focused high-energy beams to destroy cancer cells. It may be used with curative intent, combined with chemotherapy, or for symptom relief when the tumour causes pain, bleeding, breathing difficulty, or pressure symptoms.

Concurrent Chemoradiation

Often used in stage III lung cancer when surgery is not the best option. Chemotherapy and precision radiation are given together to control the chest disease aggressively.

→ Common for locally advanced disease

High Precision IMRT / VMAT

Modern planning allows radiation dose to be shaped around the tumour while protecting the healthy lung, heart, and spinal cord as much as possible.

→ Safer targeted radiation

Palliative Radiotherapy

Short-course radiation can quickly reduce bleeding, bone pain, airway compression, chest pain, or pressure symptoms caused by advanced cancer.

→ Fast symptom relief

Selected Curative Cases

Some patients who are not fit for surgery may still receive definitive high-dose radiation with curative intent after specialist evaluation.

→ Depends on stage and fitness
Treatment by Stage

Can Lung Cancer Be Cured? Treatment Depends on Stage

One of the first questions families ask is whether lung cancer is curable. The honest answer is: some early-stage lung cancers can be cured, and many advanced lung cancers can still be controlled for meaningful periods. The exact plan depends on how far the disease has spread.

Stage What it means Usual Treatment Approach
Stage I Cancer limited inside lung Surgery is often the best option. Some non-surgical patients may receive precision radiotherapy with curative intent.
Stage II Larger tumour or nearby node involvement Surgery followed by chemotherapy is common. Some patients need combined treatment planning.
Stage III More locally advanced chest disease Combination treatment using chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and sometimes surgery after specialist review.
Stage IV Cancer spread to other organs Usually treated with targeted therapy, immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and symptom-control radiation. Many patients still receive meaningful long-term disease control.
Small Cell Fast-growing subtype Mainly treated with chemotherapy ± immunotherapy and radiotherapy depending on spread.

Stage 4 Lung Cancer Treatment in Nepal

Many families think stage 4 lung cancer means nothing can be done. This is not correct. Modern targeted tablets, immunotherapy, chemotherapy, and palliative radiation can often reduce symptoms, improve breathing, and control disease for months to years depending on tumour biology and response.

Need Advice on Your Stage? Send Reports
Diagnosis at KCC

How Lung Cancer is Confirmed Before Treatment

Treatment should not start based only on an X-ray suspicion. Proper diagnosis means knowing the exact type, stage, and whether special medicines may help.

1

Specialist Consultation

Review of symptoms, smoking history, previous scans, and overall health condition.

2

CT Scan / PET Scan Review

To understand the size of the lung mass and whether disease has spread.

3

Biopsy Confirmation

A tissue sample is taken to prove cancer and identify the exact type.

4

Advanced Marker Testing if Needed

Selected patients undergo molecular or biomarker testing to see whether targeted therapy or immunotherapy is suitable.

5

Treatment Planning

The oncology team decides whether surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, targeted medicine, or combination treatment is best.

Diagnostic Services Available

  • CT chest and staging scans
  • PET imaging coordination
  • CT-guided biopsy
  • Bronchoscopy where required
  • Pathology review
  • Molecular marker testing
  • Second opinion on outside reports

Already diagnosed elsewhere?

If you already have CT reports, biopsy reports, or treatment advice from another hospital in Nepal or India, KCC can review them and guide whether the current plan is appropriate or if better options are available. Request second opinion →

Early Warning Signs

Symptoms of Lung Cancer

Many lung cancer patients ignore symptoms for months because they think it is only smoking cough, chest infection, asthma, or weakness. Please do not delay evaluation if these symptoms persist.

Persistent cough A cough lasting more than 2 to 3 weeks or a chronic cough that is getting worse
Blood in sputum Even a small amount should never be ignored
Breathing difficulty Shortness of breath while walking, climbing stairs, or even at rest
Chest or shoulder pain Pain that keeps returning or gradually becomes persistent
Weight loss Losing weight without trying or noticeable loss of appetite
Extreme tiredness Unusual weakness, fatigue, or low stamina
Voice change / hoarseness A persistent unexplained change in voice
Bone pain or back pain Can occur if disease has spread

Who should get checked early?

Smokers, former smokers, people with long-term indoor smoke exposure, and those with repeated unexplained cough should not keep taking antibiotics repeatedly without proper chest evaluation.

Lung Cancer Treatment is Available in Nepal

Whether you are newly diagnosed, already advised chemotherapy elsewhere, looking for targeted therapy, or seeking a second opinion before going to India — Kathmandu Cancer Center can review your reports and guide the next step.

New Baneshwor City Clinic · Main Cancer Campus Tathali Bhaktapur · नेपालीमा पढ्नुहोस्

Common Questions

Lung Cancer Treatment — Frequently Asked Questions

Need help understanding a CT scan, biopsy result, or outside treatment advice? Our oncology team can guide the next step before treatment starts. Send Reports for Review →

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