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Primary Testicular Lymphoma with Central Nervous System Relapse Was Successfully Treated by a Chemo-Free Regimen: A Case Report and Literature Review.

Zheng YanShuna YaoYuanyuan WangYan-Yan LiuZhihua Yao
Published in: Cancer management and research (2021)
Primary testicular lymphoma (PTL) is a rare malignancy of testis. Although the multimodality treatment (including orchiectomy, systemic chemotherapy, scrotal radiotherapy, and preventive central nervous system (CNS)-targeted treatment) is widely used to treat PTL, recurrence, especially CNS recurrence, occurred frequently. Patients with relapsed PTL have a dismal prognosis and limited treatment options. In this report, we described the case of a 63-year-old man with early-stage PTL. The patient received the multimodality treatment, but CNS relapse occurred 3 months following the front-line therapy. We gave him a combined chemo-free regimen treatment, including rituximab, ibrutinib, and lenalidomide (RIL), based on the tumor's gene mutation profile and the patient's preference. A complete response was achieved after the first cycle of treatment. Whole-brain radiotherapy was delivered as consolidative treatment following three more cycles of RIL. Thereafter, ibrutinib and lenalidomide continued as maintenance treatment. As of the submission of this manuscript, the response has lasted for more than 16 months. Based on the case, we believe chemo-free regimen RIL might be a favorable approach for PTL patients with CNS relapse, especially those frail elderly patients, when alternative treatments are not available.
Keyphrases
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