Successful salvage surgery following multimodal therapy in a patient who harboured ALK-rearranged advanced lung adenocarcinoma with multiple organ metastases.
Yoshitsugu HorioTetsuya MizunoYukinori SakaoYoshitaka InabaYasushi YatabeToyoaki HidaPublished in: Respirology case reports (2019)
The prognosis of stage IVb non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with multiple distant metastases or involvement of different extra-thoracic sites is poor. The prognosis following salvage surgery for patients with more than five metastases has been reported as most unfavourable. The following case is of a 71-year-old man with a 9-year survival duration after being diagnosed with stage IVb ALK-rearranged lung adenocarcinoma, who was treated for 6 years with whole-brain radiotherapy, pemetrexed-based chemotherapy, ALK-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) including ceritinib and alectinib, and salvage sublobar resection of the primary lung cancer and who obtained treatment-free remission (TFR) for more than 3 years following surgery.
Keyphrases
- minimally invasive
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- coronary artery bypass
- small cell lung cancer
- surgical site infection
- early stage
- locally advanced
- lymph node
- spinal cord
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- rheumatoid arthritis
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- coronary artery disease
- case report
- spinal cord injury
- radiation induced
- pain management
- blood brain barrier
- tyrosine kinase
- ulcerative colitis
- brain metastases