We herein present a rare case of ALK-positive pulmonary pleomorphic carcinoma in an octogenarian patient. A computed tomography scan of the thorax indicated a pulmonary nodule in the right upper lobe of an asymptomatic 87-year-old female. The surgical resection revealed that the disease was pleomorphic carcinoma with pathological T2aN0M0, stage IB. EML4-ALK was evaluated using immunohistochemistry and fluorescence in situ hybridization, and EGFR mutations were analyzed using the Cycleave method. While there were no EGFR mutations detected, she was positive for the ALK rearrangement. This is the first report of ALK rearrangement in an octogenarian patient with pleomorphic carcinoma of the lung.
A 77-year-old man was referred to our hospital for abnormal thoracic radiographs. Computed tomography (CT) revealed a 20-mm subpleural ground-glass opacity in the right S 6 area. A CT-guided biopsy revealed lung adenocarcinoma. Fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography revealed multiple abnormal bone accumulations, and a subsequent biopsy of a left iliac bone lesion revealed chronic lymphocytic leukemia. A right lower lung lobectomy was performed for the lung adenocarcinoma (cT1bN0M0, stage IA2). An aggressive biopsy of the bone lesion confirmed a rare case of double primary malignancies, which determined the patient's treatment and outcomes.
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