论文已发表
注册即可获取德孚的最新动态
IF 收录期刊
分子靶向治疗后肺腺癌转移消失:一项成功的临床治疗经验
Authors Li MJ, Wei J, Ai GP, Liu Y, Zhu J
Received 25 March 2022
Accepted for publication 23 May 2022
Published 26 May 2022 Volume 2022:15 Pages 539—546
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/PGPM.S367978
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single anonymous peer review
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Martin H Bluth
Introduction: Molecular targeted therapy has shown certain therapeutic effects on various cancer types, especially lung cancer. Here, we report a case of a patient with unresectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) with bone metastases and metastatic lesions that disappeared after molecular targeted therapy.
Patient Information: A 49-year-old male patient’s chest CT scan showed a patchy, slightly high-density shadow on the upper lobe of the left lung with an unclear boundary. The multiple thoracic vertebrae, 4th lumbar vertebrae, multiple ribs, right sacroiliac joint, right hip joint, right inferior ramus of pubis, left middle and upper femur, and right proximal radial bone showed nodular and slightly high-density shadows.
Interventions: The patient was not considered eligible for tumor resection due to his metastatic lesions. A resected lymph node biopsy was performed. The pathologic findings suggested lung adenocarcinoma, and the gene detection results indicated NM-005228:exon19:c.2235– 2249del:p. GLu746-Ala750del (15.31%), NM-005228:exon20:c. G2356A: p. V786M (1.67%). The patient received the icotinib hydrochloride molecular targeted therapy.
Outcomes: After two months of treatment, pulmonary nodules were basically absent on chest CT scan re-examination. After nine months of treatment, no obvious abnormalities in the thoracic vertebral bone were found on 99mTc-MDP bone scan and CT scan re-examination. No obvious structural abnormalities, such as enlarged lymph nodes, could be found by ultrasound re-examination, and the patient remained alive without recurrence at the five-year follow-up.
Conclusion: This case report may provide a clue for the future development of molecular targeted therapy for lung cancer. It will allow surgeons to collaborate with oncologists and raise awareness of the benefit of the multidisciplinary approach to the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. Moreover, our results will help patients to fully understand the effect of nonsurgical treatments and improve confidence in the diagnosis and treatment of advanced lung cancer.
Keywords: bone metastases, lung cancer, molecular targeted therapy, gene therapy