| Literature DB >> 34066912 |
Laura Burgess1, Marissa Keenan2, Alan Liang Zhou3, Kiefer Lypka3, Delvina Hasimja Saraqini3, Jeff Yao4, Samuel Martin5, Christopher Morash4, James Watterson4, Christina Canil6, Robert MacRae1.
Abstract
Approximately 20% of renal cell carcinoma (RCC) is diagnosed because of paraneoplastic manifestations. RCC has been associated with a large variety of paraneoplastic syndromes (PNS), but it is rarely associated with PNS vasculitis. We present a case of a previously healthy male who presented with systemic vasculitis; bitemporal headaches, diplopia, polyarthritis, palpable purpura, tongue lesion, peri-orbital edema, scleritis, chondritis and constitutional symptoms. He was subsequently found to have oligometastatic RCC. Both his primary lesion and site of oligometastasis were treated with stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT) and resulted in the resolution of his vasculitis, as well as sustained oncologic response. This is the first case to demonstrate that effective sustained treatment for PNS vasculitis due to oligometastatic RCC is possible with SBRT.Entities:
Keywords: oligometastases; paraneoplastic syndrome; paraneoplastic vasculitis; renal cell carcinoma (RCC); stereotactic radiotherapy (SBRT)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066912 PMCID: PMC8161761 DOI: 10.3390/curroncol28030162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol ISSN: 1198-0052 Impact factor: 3.677
Figure 1(A) Right peri-orbital edema and conjunctival injection at presentation; (B) The circular 1 cm × 1 cm white lesion on his lateral right tongue at presentation.
Figure 2(A) Axial CT revealing indeterminate 18 mm left renal lesion; (B) Axial dynamic gradient echo sequence demonstrating 17 mm T2 hypointense left renal lesion in keeping with renal cell carcinoma.
Figure 3(A) Axial CT chest demonstrating osteolytic lesion at inferior tip of left scapula with suspected overlying cortical breach; (B) Bone scan revealing abnormal focal radiotracer uptake in the inferior tip of the left scapular body, correlating to abnormality seen on CT chest.
Figure 4(A) Axial echo planar fast spin echo MR images showing stability of the left renal lesion that is heterogeneously T2 iso- and hypointense; (B) Bone scan showing stability of abnormal focal radiotracer uptake in the inferior tip of the left scapular body; (C) CT showing stability of lesion in the left scapula.