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Complete And Partial Spontaneous Regression Of Metastases Of Lung Cancer In A Patient: Serial Ct And 18f-fluodeoxyglucose Pet/ct Findings

Tatsumoto, S. 2024Lung cancer

Tatsumoto, S., Ito, Y., Yamane, T., Nishiofuku, H., Taiji, R., Nagata, T., Ishiguro, H., Yamada, A., Kato, T., & Tanaka, T. (2024). Complete and partial spontaneous regression of metastases of lung cancer in a patient: Serial CT and 18F-fluodeoxyglucose PET/CT findings. Radiology case reports, 19(10), 4403–4407. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.radcr.2024.07.034

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Abstract

Spontaneous regression of cancer is a rare biological phenomenon and the mechanisms underlying it are poorly understood. There have been few reports of temporal changes in morphology and metabolism associated with spontaneous regression. Here, we report an 80-year-old man who presented with right upper quadrant pain. He was diagnosed with stage IVA lung cancer, but without treatment, rib metastasis disappeared 4 months after the diagnosis. Although mediastinal lymph node metastasis regressed partially it began to grow 10 months after the diagnosis. In this case, complete and partial spontaneous tumor regressions were observed in the patient, allowing for a comparison of morphological and metabolic changes during each occurrence by serial computed tomography (CT) and 18F-fluodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography with computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT). We observed that the rib metastasis with high FDG uptake on initial PET/CT was composed of cancer cells as well as intratumoral immune cells, whereas recurrent mediastinal lymph node metastasis with high FDG uptake on follow-up PET/CT was composed of cancer cells with few immune cells. Our findings suggest that hypermetabolism within the rib metastasis on initial PET/CT reflected immune activation, whereas hypermetabolism within the mediastinal lymph node on follow-up PET/CT reflected tumor activation.

Case Details

Disease Location

Rib

Personal Characteristics

80-year-old man. Ex-smoker (40 cigarettes/day for 20 years, cessation for 40 years), history of dyslipidemia, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus.

Clinical Characteristics

Presented with right upper quadrant pain that corresponded to the right lower ribs. Computed tomography (CT) scan revealed a 50×31 mm mass lesion in the seventh right rib with bone destruction. There was also a 22×14 mm lung mass in the right lower lobe and a 32×26 mm enlarged mediastinal lymph node in the right lower paratracheal region. Biopsy of the rib mass indicated a poorly differentiated carcinoma with abundant inflammatory cell infiltration. Immunohistochemistry was positive for cytokeratin mnf116, CD56, and p40. Suggesting a combined neuroendocrine and squamous cell carcinoma. As the rib mass regressed, the right lower paratracheal lymph node continued to show slight growth and shrinkage. Endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration of the mediastinal lymph node was performed. Histologic examination of the specimens revealed a carcinoma that was immunohistochemically similar to the specimen of the rib biopsy.

Remission Characteristics

Two months after the biopsy, the size of all tumor lesions had decreased, and 4 months after the biopsy, the biopsied rib metastasis had completely disappeared.

Treatment & Mechanisms

Proposed Remission Mechanisms

Immune activation

Clinical Treatment

Analgesics, biopsy