Literature DB >> 31149454

Common carotid artery rupture during treatment with lenvatinib for anaplastic thyroid cancer.

Kazufumi Obata1, Iwao Sugitani2, Aya Ebina1, Yoshiya Sugiura3, Kazuhisa Toda1, Shunji Takahashi4, Kazuyoshi Kawabata1.   

Abstract

Anaplastic thyroid cancer is a fatal disease for which no effective therapeutic strategies exist. Lenvatinib, a tyrosine-kinase inhibitor that targets vascular endothelial growth factor receptor, has recently been approved in Japan for the treatment of patients with unresectable thyroid cancer including anaplastic thyroid cancer. Although lenvatinib, like the other tyrosine-kinase inhibitors, sunitinib and sorafenib, might also confer a risk of bleeding, fatal bleeding as a result of lenvatinib treatment for anaplastic thyroid cancer has not been described. A 61-year-old woman presented with a 7-cm mass in the right lobe of the thyroid, lymph node metastases to the neck and multiple lung metastases. Fine needle aspiration revealed that the tumor was anaplastic thyroid cancer. The TNM classification was T4aN1bM1, stage IVC. Shortly after local curative surgery, a tumor recurred in her neck that was treated with lenvatinib (24 mg/day). Nineteen days later, the common carotid artery ruptured and the lenvatinib was stopped. She received the best possible supportive care but died 40 days after stopping the lenvatinib. Autopsy findings showed that the tumor had invaded the adventitia of the common carotid artery at the region of the neck surgery, and an aneurysm had developed. However, the adventitia of the common carotid artery was preserved at the non-dissected area. Lenvatinib might confer risk for fatal bleeding in patients with recurrent anaplastic thyroid cancer after neck surgery, particularly with dissection around the common carotid artery.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anaplastic thyroid cancer; Common carotid artery; Lenvatinib; Rupture

Year:  2016        PMID: 31149454      PMCID: PMC6498322          DOI: 10.1007/s13691-016-0257-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int Cancer Conf J        ISSN: 2192-3183


  3 in total

1.  Nasogastric administration of lenvatinib solution in a mechanically ventilated patient with rapidly growing anaplastic thyroid cancer.

Authors:  Fumiaki Kawano; Tadato Yonekawa; Hideki Yamaguchi; Nobuhiro Shibata; Kousei Tashiro; Makoto Ikenoue; Shun Munakata; Kazuhiro Higuchi; Hiroyuki Tanaka; Yuichiro Sato; Ayumu Hosokawa; Shinsuke Takeno; Kunihide Nakamura; Atsushi Nanashima
Journal:  Endocrinol Diabetes Metab Case Rep       Date:  2020-08-04

Review 2.  American Head and Neck Society Endocrine Surgery Section and International Thyroid Oncology Group consensus statement on mutational testing in thyroid cancer: Defining advanced thyroid cancer and its targeted treatment.

Authors:  David C Shonka; Alan Ho; Ashish V Chintakuntlawar; Jessica L Geiger; Jong C Park; Nagashree Seetharamu; Sina Jasim; Amr H Abdelhamid Ahmed; Keith C Bible; Marcia S Brose; Maria E Cabanillas; Kirsten Dabekaussen; Louise Davies; Dora Dias-Santagata; James A Fagin; William C Faquin; Ronald A Ghossein; Raj K Gopal; Akira Miyauchi; Yuri E Nikiforov; Matthew D Ringel; Bruce Robinson; Mabel M Ryder; Eric J Sherman; Peter M Sadow; Jennifer J Shin; Brendan C Stack; R Michael Tuttle; Lori J Wirth; Mark E Zafereo; Gregory W Randolph
Journal:  Head Neck       Date:  2022-03-11       Impact factor: 3.821

3.  2021 American Thyroid Association Guidelines for Management of Patients with Anaplastic Thyroid Cancer.

Authors:  Keith C Bible; Electron Kebebew; James Brierley; Juan P Brito; Maria E Cabanillas; Thomas J Clark; Antonio Di Cristofano; Robert Foote; Thomas Giordano; Jan Kasperbauer; Kate Newbold; Yuri E Nikiforov; Gregory Randolph; M Sara Rosenthal; Anna M Sawka; Manisha Shah; Ashok Shaha; Robert Smallridge; Carol K Wong-Clark
Journal:  Thyroid       Date:  2021-03       Impact factor: 6.568

  3 in total

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