Stages and types of lung cancer
The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) now recommends using the TNM system to stage small cell lung cancer. Your doctor can tell you more about which system they use.
Doctors describe small cell lung cancer as limited if the cancer is contained in a single area on one side of the chest. And the cancer can be treated with radiotherapy to just one area.
This generally means your cancer:
is only in one lung
may be in nearby lymph nodes – for example, in the centre of the chest or above the collar bone
If you have limited disease you are likely to have chemotherapy as well as radiotherapy treatment. This is usually given as radiotherapy at the same time as the first two cycles of chemotherapy (chemoradiotherapy).
If your cancer is at a very early stage, you might be able to have surgery to remove the part of the lung containing the cancer. This is called a lobectomy. But surgery isn’t used very often for small cell lung cancer. If you do have surgery, you usually have chemotherapy afterwards and might also have radiotherapy.
Your doctor might also suggest that you have radiotherapy to the brain to reduce the risk of cancer spreading there. This is called prophylactic cranial irradiation.
Read more about treatment for lung cancer
Extensive disease means that the cancer has spread beyond a single area that can be treated with radiotherapy.
It might have spread:
within the chest (either to the other lung or to lymph nodes further away from the cancer)
to other parts of your body
into the space between the layers of tissue that surrounds the lungs (pleural space), causing a build up of fluid (malignant pleural effusion)
in between the heart and the sack (pericardium) that surrounds the heart, causing a build up of fluid (malignant pericardial effusion)
The main treatment for extensive stage disease is chemotherapy with or without immunotherapy. Your doctor might also suggest radiotherapy to the brain to reduce the risk of cancer spreading there. Instead of radiotherapy to the brain, they might suggest observation through routine MRI scans.
Find out more about chemotherapy for lung cancer
Staging using limited and extensive disease is becoming less common. Doctors are using the TNM and number staging systems more regularly. This is because we are learning more about SCLC and how best to treat the different stages.
TNM stands for Tumour (T), Node (N) and Metastasis (M). The staging is different depending on the type of cancer you have.
The information below is an overview of the TNM staging for all types of cancer.
T describes the size of the tumour (cancer)
N describes whether there are any cancer cells in the nearby lymph nodes
M describes whether the cancer has spread to parts of the body further away from where the cancer started
The doctor gives each factor (T, N and M) a number. The number depends on how far the cancer has grown or spread.
So, a very small cancer which hasn't spread to the lymph nodes or elsewhere in the body may be T1 N0 M0.
A larger cancer that has spread into the nearby lymph nodes and to another part of the body may be T3 N1 M1.
Limited disease
In the TNM staging system limited disease is the same as any T, any N, M0.
This generally means stage 1, 2 and 3 SCLC.
Extensive disease
Extensive disease is the same as:
any T, any N, M1a
any T, any N, M1b
any T any N, M1c
Some people might have T3 or T4 tumours that are too big to be treated with radiotherapy to just one area.
Generally, extensive disease means a stage 4 small cell lung cancer.
Find out more about TNM staging
Choose a number stage from our main stages, types and grades page
The stage of your cancer helps your doctor to decide which treatment you need. Treatment also depends on:
your type of cancer (the type of cells the cancer started in)
where the cancer is
other health conditions that you have
Last reviewed: 04 Jan 2023
Next review due: 05 Jan 2026
Lung cancer starts in the windpipe (trachea), the main airway (bronchus) or the lung tissue. Cancer that starts in the lung is called primary lung cancer.
Your treatment depends on several factors. These include what type of lung cancer you have, how big it is and whether it has spread (the stage). It also depends on your general health.
Metastatic lung cancer means that the cancer has spread from where it started in the lung to other parts of the body. It is also called advanced lung cancer.
There is support available during and after treatment to help you cope. This includes support from your clinical nurse specialist, cancer charities, community services, and family and friends.
Survival depends on many factors including the stage and type of your lung cancer.
The stage of a cancer tells you how big it is and whether it has spread. Doctors use the TNM or number staging systems to stage lung cancer. They might also use limited and extensive stages to stage small cell lung cancer.

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