The patient was a 47-year-old male with the chief complaints of right shoulder pain and fever. A 10-cm mass was found to be present in the right pulmonary apical region on chest X-ray examination. The mass was diagnosed as a G-CSF-producing invasive apical cancer and the patient underwent chemoradiotherapy followed by right upper lobectomy with combined resection of the chest wall, and lymph node dissection. A very small nodule was noted in the right frontal lobe on brain MRI before surgery, and the final diagnosis was pT3N0M1, stage IV lung adenocarcinoma. For the brain metastasis, gamma knife treatment and chemotherapy were performed after surgery, and there was no recurrence during 16 months after surgery. The prognosis for G-CSF-producing lung cancer and invasive apical cancer is poor. This was a rare and difficult case of lung cancer showing both characteristics of lung cancer.
Background: Endoscopic resection is widely used as an effective treatment for superficial esophageal cancer. However, the risk of lymph node metastasis increases in cases of muscularis mucosae or deeper invasion, for which additional treatment such as radiotherapy or surgery is required. Accordingly, the current study investigated the efficacy and toxicity of salvage radiotherapy after non-curative endoscopic resection as an organ preservation strategy. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 37 esophageal cancer patients who received salvage radiotherapy after noncurative endoscopic resection. The pathological invasion depths were the muscularis mucosae, submucosal layer, and muscularis propria in 14, 22, and one patient, respectively. All patients received external beam radiotherapy. Among them, eight received intraluminal brachytherapy following external beam radiotherapy. Elective nodal irradiation was administered to all patients. Twenty-five patients received concurrent platinum and fluorouracilbased chemotherapy. Results: The median follow-up time was 74 months (range: 3-212). The 5-year progression-free survival and overall survival rates were 64 and 78%, respectively. No local or regional lymph node recurrence was observed. The causes of death included esophageal cancer in one patient, metachronous esophageal cancer in one patient, other malignancies in eight patients, and other causes in six patients. Late cardiac toxicities ≥ grade 3 were observed in six patients, one of whom died of arrhythmia.Conclusions: Salvage radiotherapy after non-curative esophageal endoscopic resection is an effective treatment as an organ preservation strategy. Although muscularis mucosae and submucosal cancer have a high risk of lymph node metastasis, our results suggest that elective nodal irradiation contributes to reduced regional node metastases.
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