| Literature DB >> 20170543 |
Dan-Fang Yan1, Sen-Xiang Yan, Jing-Song Yang, Yi-Xiang J Wang, Xiao-Li Sun, Xin-Biao Liao, Jun-Qing Liu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gefitinib is one of the small molecule inhibitors of epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase (EGFR TKIs). Clinical trials have demonstrated it is effective for treatment of a subset of patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Gefitinib has been generally considered to be a relatively safe agent. Besides a small proportion of fatal interstitial pneumonia, the common adverse drug reactions of gefitinib include diarrhea and skin rash, which are generally mild and reversible. Herein, we report the first two cases of brain metastasis hemorrhage that might be involved with the use of gefitinib. CASEEntities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20170543 PMCID: PMC2843670 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-10-49
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 1Case 1. A: Prior to gefitinib therapy, chest CT scan shows a primary lesion (arrow) in the upper lobe of right lung and multiple pulmonary metastatic nodules (arrowheads) in both lungs. B: One month later with gefitinib therapy, chest CT scan shows significant shrinkage of the primary lesion (arrow) as well as marked absorption of metastatic nodules.
Figure 2Case 1. A: Contrast-enhanced T1-weighted brain MRI shows multiple metastatic lesions, with the largest one (arrow) in the left occipital lobe. B: One month later with gefitinib therapy together with two weeks' WBRT, T1-weighted MRI demonstrates a subacute hematoma (arrow) in the metastatic lesion.
Figure 3Case 2. A: Chest CT scans shows pulmonary metastatic dissemination (arrows) from a previously operated NSCLC in the right lung. A patchy shadow (arrowhead) representing radiation-induced fibrosis is also observed. B: About 2 month later with gefitinib therapy, chest CT scan shows significant absorption of the metastatic lesions.
Figure 4Case 2. A: T1-weighted brain MRI shows a metastatic lesion of heterogeneous signal intensities in the left thalamus (arrow). Components of hyper-signal intensities represent subacute hemorrhage. B: This lesion is also of heterogeneous signal intensities on T2-weighted images, with components of hypointense hemosiderins representing chronic hemorrhage (arrow). C: Contrast-enhanced MRI shows inhomogeneous enhancement of the lesion (arrow).