We herein report a 75-year-old man with non-small-cell lung cancer who developed tubulointerstitial nephritis due to pembrolizumab administration. He was successfully treated with atezolizumab following steroid administration. He was initially diagnosed with lung adenocarcinoma (T1bN3M1b, stage IV), with a programmed cell death-ligand 1 tumor proportion score of 25-49%. Although the tumor responded well to pembrolizumab, the drug was discontinued because of the diagnosis of tubulointerstitial nephritis on a renal biopsy. Tubulointerstitial nephritis was treated with 30 mg prednisolone, the dose of which was tapered to and maintained at 5 mg. Following lung cancer progression, atezolizumab was administered, and the tumor responded again. Its efficacy has been sustained for >15 months without recurrence of tubulointerstitial nephritis.
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A 41-year-old man with exertional dyspnea was referred to our hospital. Chest computed tomography (CT) showed a pulmonary arteriovenous malformation (PAVM) in the left lingular lobe, and magnetic resonance imaging showed a brain abscess. After antimicrobial therapy, the patient underwent thoracoscopic lingulectomy of the PAVM. Pathological examination revealed lung metastases of papillary thyroid cancer (PTC) that were undetectable by CT. The patient underwent total thyroidectomy and D2b lymphadenectomy for the PTC (the pathological stage was T1bN2M1, Stage II). After surgery, the patient received 100 mCi of 131Iodine; post-treatment scans revealed only neck (remnant) uptake and the patient continued with thyroid hormone replacement therapy. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a case of combined PAVM and occult lung metastases of PTC. Clinicians should remember that they may detect micro lung metastases of any cancer when investigating resected lung specimens.
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