| Literature DB >> 27829227 |
Ling-Yu Ding1,2,3,4, Ke-Jun Liu5, Zhe-Long Jiang6, Hai-Ying Wu2,3,4, Shi-Xiu Wu7.
Abstract
Gastric metastases from lung adenocarcinoma are rare and usually asymptomatic. A 61-year-old woman was referred to our department because of a right lower pulmonary mass found on a chest X-ray film in August 2012. Right lower lobectomy was performed for pulmonary adenocarcinoma. Four months later, she developed epigastric discomfort. A fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) scan showed a malignancy at the cardias of the stomach. A biopsy diagnosed poorly differentiated carcinoma and a gastric carcinoma was suspected. She underwent a subtotal gastrectomy and part of esophagectomy. The histologic diagnosis was metastasis from the pulmonary adenocarcinoma. She visited us again for her increasing level of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) after two months. FDG-PET/CT showed multiple malignant lesions in her liver, considering metastases from pulmonary origin. As she harbored activating epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) mutation, she received erlotinib from April, 2013. She survives 4 years after the lung resection and is still on erotinib treatment with complete response. Although gastric metastasis from lung cancer is considered a late stage of the disease, a radical resection might provide survival in solitary metastasis. Moreover, systemic therapy was emphasized after local treatment in some late stage cases.Entities:
Keywords: gastric metastasis; liver metastases; lung cancer; surgery; targeted therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27829227 PMCID: PMC5350003 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.13114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1CT scan showing the mass in the right lower lung
Figure 2Pathological examination of the lung tumor orienting toward a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, (A) hematoxylin and eosin stain, 200×; (B) TTF-1 immunohistochemistry stain, 200×.
Figure 3PET/CT scan showing the gastric lesion in the cardia
Figure 4Pathological examination of the gastric tumor orienting toward a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma metastasized from lung cancer, (A) hematoxylin and eosin stain, 200×; (B) TTF-1 immunohistochemistry stain, 200×; (C) CDX-2 immunohistochemistry stain, 200×.
Figure 5PET/CT scan showing multiple malignant lesions in the liver and suggesting liver metastases
Figure 6PET/CT (A) and CT with contrast (B) in follow-up care showing liver lesions disappeared after erlotinib therapy and achieved CR.