2 research outputs found

    Uterine perivascular epithelioid tumors (PEComas) with lung metastasis showed good responses to mTOR and VEGFR inhibitors: A case report

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    Perivascular epithelioid cell tumors (PEComas) are extremely rare mesenchymal neoplasms for which the uterus is the most common site. The prognosis of malignant PEComa is poor as it is characterized by resistance to classical chemotherapies. Both mTOR inhibitors and VEGFR inhibitors exhibited clinical utility in treating malignant PEComas, but the combination of these two regimens has rarely been reported. In the present case, a uterine PEComa patient developed lung and bone metastases after the failure of chemotherapies and derived benefit from the combination regimen of an mTOR inhibitor (everolimus) and a VEGFR inhibitor (apatinib), achieving a 15-month progression-free survival. Targeted NGS revealed TP53 and TSC2 mutations in the patient’s primary uterine tumors and plasma ctDNA at disease progression. Plasma ctDNA clearance was consistent with a radiologic partial response determined by RECIST 1.1 and a reduction of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and cancer antigen 125 (CA125) levels. Thus, we provided clinical evidence supporting the administration of combined therapy of mTOR and VEGFR inhibitors to metastatic uterine PEComa patients and highlighted the application of serial plasma ctDNA profiling for dynamic disease monitoring

    Case Report: Lung adenocarcinoma associated with germline ERCC2 frameshift mutation

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    Family history is an established risk factor for lung cancer. Previous studies have found that germline genetic alterations, such as those in EGFR, BRCA1, BRCA2, CHEK2, CDKN2A, HER2, MET, NBN, PARK2, RET, TERT, TP53, and YAP1, are associated with an increased risk of developing lung cancer. The study reports the first of a lung adenocarcinoma proband with germline ERCC2 frameshift mutation c.1849dup (p. A617Gfs*32). Her family cancer history review demonstrated that her two healthy sisters, a brother with lung cancer, and three healthy cousins were positive for ERCC2 frameshift mutation, which might contribute to increased cancer risk. Our study highlights the necessity of performing comprehensive genomic profiling in discovering rare genetic alterations, early cancer screening, and monitoring for patients with family cancer history
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