| Literature DB >> 31612019 |
Yu Feng1, Yufeng Cao2, Mingming Yuan3, Rongrong Chen3, Xue Ji1, Xingsheng Hu1.
Abstract
Lynch syndrome (LS), as a result of the germline mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes, is characterized by the increased risk of endometrium, colon, and urinary tract cancer. Individuals with this disorder may occasionally have multiple primary carcinomas. Regardless of tumor type, pembrolizumab was approved for the treatment of patients with unresectable or metastatic mismatch repair deficient tumors, which may be an optional therapeutic method for patients with LS with multiple primary carcinomas. This case study is of a MSH2-deficient patient with LS with metachronous urothelial and colon cancer, who received pembrolizumab treatment for 8 months. The responses of the two primary sites to immunotherapy differed. Based on the changes of tumor markers and tumor size illustrated by imageological examinations, no response was observed in the sigmoid colon lesion, whereas an immune-associated phenomenon known as pseudoprogression was detected in the ureteral lesion. Immunotherapy was innovatively applied to the patient with multiple primary carcinomas. This case proposes a novel concept in which immunotherapy may potentially control the cancer growth in patients with LS and multiple primary carcinomas. However, further large-scale investigations are required. Furthermore, it raises a challenge to monitor the effectiveness of immunotherapy. Copyright: © Feng et al.Entities:
Keywords: Lynch syndrome; metachronous urothelial and colon cancer; pembrolizumab; pseudoprogression
Year: 2019 PMID: 31612019 PMCID: PMC6781514 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2019.10909
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1.H&E and immunohistchemical staining of the sigmoid colon lesion. (A) H&E and immunohistochemical staining of (B) MLH1, (C) MSH2, (D) MSH6 and (E) PMS2 of the sigmoid colon lesion. MLH1, MutL homolog 1; PMS2, PMS1 homolog 2, mismatch repair system conponent; MSH6, mutS homolog 6; MSH2, MutS homolog 2. Magnification, ×100.
Figure 2.MSH2 germline mutation identified by NGS and confirmed by Sanger sequencing. (A) The reads map of MSH2 c.1759+1G>T germline mutation detected by NGS. (B) Sanger sequencing of the MSH2 c.1759+1G>T germline mutation for this patient, indicated by the red arrow. MSH2, MutS homolog 2; NGS, next-generation sequencing.
Figure 3.Image examinations demonstrate the changes of left ureteral and colon tumors during the period of pembrolizumab treatment. The arrow marks the location of the tumors. (A) represents the changes of left ureteral tumors before pembrolizumab treatment, (B) at 4 months after treatment and (C) at 8 months after treatment. (D) represents the changes of colon tumors before pembrolizumab treatment, (E) at 4 months after treatment and (F) at 8 months after treatment. The colon wall increased in thickness steadily, while the ureteral lesion increased in size at 4 months, and markedly decreased at 8 months.
Tumor markers of the patient between November 2016 and July 2017 as detected by electrogenerated chemiluminescence.
| Markers (unit) | 11/28/2016 | 03/20/2017 | 07/05/2017 | Upper limit of the normal range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CA19-9 (U/ml) | 307.9 | 133.3 | 116.7 | 37 |
| CA72-4 (U/ml) | 82.04 | 41.84 | 56.48 | 9.8 |
| CEA (ng/ml) | 216.2 | 159.5 | 327 | 5 |