| Literature DB >> 35154939 |
Carsten Nieder1, Bård Mannsåker1.
Abstract
This case report describes the treatment approach and outcome in a 69-year-old female patient with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) diagnosed with T4 N2 M1b (intraspinal) disease. The two most common targets for tyrosine kinase inhibitors (epidermal growth factor receptor and anaplastic lymphoma kinase) were not expressed. Programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) was expressed in <50% of the tumor cells. In 2016, initial guideline-concordant treatment with carboplatin/vinorelbine chemotherapy was initiated. Between the first two cycles, all positron emission tomography (PET) positive lesions were irradiated with 30 Gy in 10 fractions (lung, nodes, thoracic spinal manifestation). After nine months with excellent response (at least partial remission, possibly fibrosis only), bilateral lung metastases were diagnosed. The patient was started on nivolumab monotherapy (later atezolizumab due to a change in National practice) and completed two years of treatment. She is currently in continued complete remission with regular follow-up examinations. This case illustrates that outcomes comparable to those observed in patients with limited brain metastases may be observed in patients with localized intraspinal disease and that immune checkpoint inhibitors play an important role in the management of metastatic NSCLC.Entities:
Keywords: 5-year overall survival; central nervous system metastasis; cytotoxic chemotherapy; immune check-point inhibitor; intradural extramedullary spinal metastasis; long-term outcome; metastatic non-small cell lung cancer; radiotherapy (rt)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35154939 PMCID: PMC8815442 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.20960
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184