タイトル
Vol.57 No.1 contents Japanese/English

download PDFFull Text of PDF (780K)
Article in Japanese

- Case Report -

A Case of ALK-positive Lung Cancer in Which Brain Metastasis Was Surgically Diagnosed and Alectinib Was Found to be Remarkably Effective

Yuki Mitarai1, Yukari Tsubata2, Mika Nakao2, Tamio Okimoto2, Shun-ichi Hamaguchi2, Takeshi Isobe2
1Faculty of Medicine, 2Division of Respiratory Medicine and Medical Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine, Shimane University, Japan

Background. The recommended primary therapy for ALK-positive lung cancer is crizotinib. While remains effective for a long time for some patients, it eventually becomes ineffective and leads to an enlargement of the tumor in many other patients. Case. The patient was a 71-year-old woman who was diagnosed with pulmonary adenocarcinoma in 2012 (cT2aN3M1b, stage IV, ALK-positive). During chemotherapy, several cystic lesions without contrast enhancement were found on contrast-enhanced cranial MRI and their progress was observed. After chemotherapy became ineffective in May 2013, the treatment was changed to the oral administration of crizotinib, which resulted in the shrinkage of the primary lesion. Nine months from the start of crizotinib treatment, the patient's cerebral lesions were enlarged, while the primary lesion was observed to have shrunk. Craniotomy was therefore performed to conduct a biopsy. The definitive diagnosis of the biopsy specimen was metastasis to the brain from pulmonary adenocarcinoma. After whole brain irradiation, an exacerbation of bone metastasis occurred and the oral administration of alectinib was initiated in September 2014. A significant reduction of the metastatic lesions was observed on contrast-enhanced cranial MRI at one month after the start of alectinib treatment and the tumor reduction effect continues to be effective at 19 months after the start of alectinib treatment. Conclusion. In this case, alectinib was effective for treating brain metastasis for which crizotinib was ineffective. This is partly because there is a difference in the degree of transitivity of both drugs to the central nervous system. Moreover, because metastasis to the brain from mucinous tumors may provide atypical imaging findings--as occurred in this case--sufficient observation and a definitive histology-based diagnosis are vital.
key words: ALK-positive lung cancer, Brain metastases, Mucoid tumors, Crizotinib, Alectinib

Received: June 13, 2016
Accepted: November 14, 2016

JJLC 57 (1): 23-28, 2017

ページの先頭へ