Abscopal effect after palliative five-fraction radiation therapy on bone and lymph node metastases from luminal B breast cancer: A case report and clinical implications for palliative radiation therapy

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Abstract

The abscopal effect is a phenomenon in which radiation therapy results in the regression of metastatic lesions at a distance from the irradiated lesions. Here, we have described a 37-year-old woman with advanced luminal B breast cancer who presented with severe pain at multiple sites. Multiple bone, lymph node, and lung metastases were found on computed tomography (CT). She refused to receive any systemic therapy, but she agreed to receive palliative radiotherapy (RT). Multi-site RT (25 or 30 Gy in 5 fractions) was performed for pain palliation. The pain was completely relieved after RT. Furthermore, the pulmonary CT after 3 months of RT showed a dramatic regression of the previous multiple lung metastases. This is the case report demonstrating the abscopal effect in South Korea.

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Kim, T. H., & Chang, J. S. (2021). Abscopal effect after palliative five-fraction radiation therapy on bone and lymph node metastases from luminal B breast cancer: A case report and clinical implications for palliative radiation therapy. Radiation Oncology Journal, 39(2), 139–144. https://doi.org/10.3857/roj.2020.00990

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