| Literature DB >> 30034242 |
Xin Yang1, Rui Chen1, Chen Wu1, Weiqing Zhao1, Mei Ji1.
Abstract
Rapid metastasis contributes significantly to the high mortality rates in lung adenocarcinoma. The present study reports a rare case of primary lung adenocarcinoma with concomitant gastric, duodenal, bone, and mediastinal lymph node metastases. A large gene panel based on the next-generation sequencing was used to detect gene mutations in different metastatic sites and blood. The results showed that the gene mutation spectrums among different metastatic foci were roughly similar. The mutation abundance was highest in mediastinal lymph nodes. Unique mutation sites were detected only in mediastinal lymph nodes, bone, and gastric metastatic foci. Despite partial heterogeneity, there are currently no applicable targeted drugs to adopt. In addition, tumor mutation burden (TMB) showed that blood, gastric, bone, and mediastinal lymph node metastases were all TMB-High, while the duodenal metastasis was TMB-Low. This study is the first to report a rare case of newly diagnosed lung adenocarcinoma with concomitant gastrointestinal metastases and to perform mutation analyses on all metastatic foci. Large sample sizes with similar cases are required to gain deeper insights.Entities:
Keywords: TMB; duodenal metastasis; gastric metastasis; lung adenocarcinoma
Year: 2018 PMID: 30034242 PMCID: PMC6049053 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S167602
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Figure 1(A) Chest computed tomography revealed a lobulated soft tissue (2.7×2.3 cm, arrow) with an irregular hollow shadow in the posterior segment of the upper left lung lobe. (B) Mediastinal and perihilar lymph node metastases were noted (arrow).
Figure 2(A) Three-dimensional reconstruction of computed tomography image revealed that the right upper humeral bone metastasis was combined with a pathological bone fracture (arrow). (B) Gastroscopy revealed an ulcer (arrow) of approximately 2×2 cm located in posterior wall of gastric corpus. (C) A rough uplift (arrow) of 1.5×2.0 cm was observed in the junction of duodenal bulb and descending part. (D) Endoscopic ultrasound-guided fine needle aspirate was performed on mediastinal lymph nodes (arrow).
Figure 3(A) Mutational analysis on gastric, duodenal, bone, mediastinal lymph node metastases, and blood. Different colors represent unique mutation sites in each location. (B) The mutation abundance on all metastatic foci and blood. The p-value of <0.05 based on the 2-sided test is considered to be statistically significant.
Note: * nonsense mutation.