Is oligoprogression a potentially curable disease in epidermal growth factor receptor mutant lung adenocarcinoma?
Sviatoslav ChekhunAssumpció Lopez-ParadísAintzane UrbizuTeresa MoránAnabel MañesMarc CucurullCarlos Martínez-BarenysIris TeruelGloria MoragasEnric CarcerenyAna Maria Muñoz-MarmolMaria SaigíPublished in: Exploration of targeted anti-tumor therapy (2023)
Third-generation epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have shown impressive results in EGFR mutant lung cancer (LC) patients in terms of disease control rate with a positive impact on overall survival. Nevertheless, after months of treatment with targeted therapy, progression inevitably occurs. Some patients develop oligoprogression and local treatment is required for optimal disease control while maintaining EGFR-TKIs. This work features a clinical case of a patient harboring an EGFR mutant LC undergoing oligoprogression to EGFR-TKIs, first into the brain and afterward to the primary tumor, requiring local ablative strategies, including primary tumor resection three years after the start of osimertinib. Currently, the patient is still alive and continues with a complete response upon EGFR-TKIs maintenance. Hence, oligoprogression, even in driven oncogenic tumors, represents a distinct biological entity and potential curative disease that deserves particular consideration in multidisciplinary tumor boards. In this case, tumor primary resection after three years of the initial diagnosis represents a paradigm shift in the treatment of EGFR mutant patients.
Keyphrases
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- tyrosine kinase
- small cell lung cancer
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- mass spectrometry
- case report
- patient reported outcomes
- high resolution
- combination therapy
- transcription factor
- climate change
- white matter
- quality improvement
- wild type
- rectal cancer
- human health