| Literature DB >> 26376592 |
Yasunobu Sekiguchi1, Asami Shimada, Moe Matsuzawa, Hidenori Imai, Mutsumi Wakabayashi, Keiji Sugimoto, Noriko Nakamura, Tomohiro Sawada, Junichi Arita, Norio Komatsu, Masaaki Noguchi.
Abstract
The patient, a 79-year-old Japanese man, was diagnosed with the chronic phase of chronic myeloid leukemia and begun on nilotinib therapy in April 2011. The therapeutic response was major molecular response in August. About 19 months after the start of nilotinib therapy at 400 mg/day (November 2012), an adenocarcinoma (24 x 20 mm) confined to the head of the pancreas developed. In February 2013, a pancreaticoduodenectomy was performed. The therapy regimen was switched to dasatinib at 100 mg/day, beginning in April. The response was still major molecular response with no recurrence of pancreatic carcinoma in July 2013. There have been 29 reported cases of secondary neoplasms associated with nilotinib therapy. These secondary neoplasms were characterized by relatively frequent occurrence of papilloma (6 cases), gastric cancer (3 cases), fibroma (3 cases), and thyroid neoplasms (2 cases). The present case, however, is the first to be reported as carcinoma of the pancreas. This report describes the case.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26376592 PMCID: PMC4563202 DOI: 10.4274/tjh.2013.0322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Turk J Haematol ISSN: 1300-7777 Impact factor: 1.831
Laboratory findings upon initial examination in this department.
Figure 1Clinical course: A diagnosis of chronic phase of chronic myeloid leukemia was made and the patient was begun on nilotinib at 400 mg/day. He obtained major molecular response. He began suffering from postprandial epigastric pain and a computed tomography scan revealed a tumor mass in the head of the pancreas. The mass was diagnosed as an adenocarcinoma. Nilotinib was discontinued and a pancreaticoduodenectomy was performed. Nilotinib at 400 mg/day was reinstituted, but this was switched to dasatinib at 100 mg/day when despondency appeared. The listless feeling then disappeared and the response is still major molecular response with no indication of pancreatic cancer recurrence.
Figure 2Computed tomography scans of the abdomen: (a) A 24x20-mm tumor mass was noted in the head of the pancreas (red arrow). (b) The main pancreatic duct was dilated, but there was neither vascular abnormality nor lymph node swelling (red arrow).
Reported secondary neoplasms associated with nilotinib therapy.
Reports of pancreatitis, pancreatic enzyme elevation, and secondary malignancies associated with nilotinib therapy.