| Literature DB >> 35890187 |
Yoichi Nishii1, Kazuki Furuhashi1, Kentaro Ito1, Tadashi Sakaguchi1, Yuta Suzuki1, Kentaro Fujiwara1, Taro Yasuma2, Tetsu Kobayashi3, Corina N D'Alessandro-Gabazza2, Esteban C Gabazza2, Osamu Taguchi1, Osamu Hataji1.
Abstract
Thymic carcinoma is a rare malignant tumor with a poor prognosis. No standard treatment is currently available. The present case was a 64-year-old male smoker with no symptoms referred to our hospital because of abnormal chest radiological findings. The CT study showed a tumor between the anterior mediastinum and the right lung upper lobe, multiple nodular shadows along the right pleura, and pleural effusion. A CT-guided needle biopsy revealed squamous cell carcinoma. However, the differential diagnosis between thymic carcinoma and primary lung cancer was difficult. Treatment with carboplatin, nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel, and pembrolizumab was initiated. The CT scan showed tumor shrinkage and good clinical response after four treatment cycles. Therapy was switched to maintenance therapy with pembrolizumab alone. Imaging studies showed further tumor shrinkage after twelve cycles of maintenance therapy with pembrolizumab. Sixteen cycles of maintenance therapy were continued without performance status deterioration. An abnormal radiological finding was detected after a twelve-month exacerbation-free period. The diagnosis was thymic carcinoma. Treatment with lenvatinib was initiated, and tumor-size reduction was observed. This is the first report of a case showing a successful maintenance therapy with pembrolizumab after effective first-line therapy with a combination of carboplatin-based chemotherapy plus pembrolizumab in advanced thymic carcinoma.Entities:
Keywords: lung cancer; pembrolizumab; squamous cell carcinoma; thymic carcinoma
Year: 2022 PMID: 35890187 PMCID: PMC9319623 DOI: 10.3390/ph15070889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Radiological findings. Plain radiograph (A) and computed tomography (B–E). The computed tomography revealed a tumor between the anterior mediastinum and the right lung upper lobe (B,C), multiple nodular shadows along the right pleura (D), and pleural effusion (E). Arrows indicate the lesion.
Figure 2Bronchoscopy and computed tomography-guided biopsy. A thin bronchoscope, endobronchial ultrasonography, and a guide sheath were used during the bronchoscopy (A). Biopsy was performed under computed tomography guidance (B).
Figure 3Tumor pathological findings. Hematoxylin/eosin staining of the tissue specimen revealed a solid tumor with interstitial fibrosis (A,B) and positive immunostaining for p40 (C) and CK5/6 (D). Scale bars indicate 200 µm (A) and 80 µm (B).
Figure 4Positron emission tomography–computed tomography. Before therapy, the primary tumor’s positron emission tomography–computed tomography showed high 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose accumulation and a maximum standardized uptake value of 10.95 (A–C). After therapy, the primary tumor’s positron emission tomography–computed tomography showed a maximum standardized uptake value of 4.5 (D–F).
Figure 5The clinical course of the patient. PET, positron emission tomography; CT, computed tomography; C, chemotherapy, CBDCA, carboplatin; PTX, paclitaxel; nab, nanoparticle albumin-bound.