Whole-brain radiation and pembrolizumab treatment for a non-small-cell lung cancer patient with meningeal carcinomatosis lacking driver oncogenes led to a long-term survival

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Abstract

We herein report a 66-year-old woman with advanced lung adenocarcinoma [programmed cell death and its ligand 1 (PD-L1) tumor proportion score 60%] lacking driver oncogenes in whom meningeal carcinomatosis, along with sudden onset dizziness, deafness, and consciousness disturbance, appeared after second-line chemotherapy. Whole-brain radiation therapy (WBRT) and Pembrolizumab were subsequently administered, and third-line chemotherapy with Pembrolizumab is now ongoing. At the time of writing, the patient has achieved a 23-month survival without disease progression. Our findings suggest that the combination of WBRT and an immune checkpoint inhibitor is effective for non-small-cell lung cancer patients lacking driver oncogenes who develop meningeal carcinomatosis.

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Nakashima, K., Demura, Y., Oi, M., Tabata, M., Tada, T., Shiozaki, K., … Ishizuka, T. (2020). Whole-brain radiation and pembrolizumab treatment for a non-small-cell lung cancer patient with meningeal carcinomatosis lacking driver oncogenes led to a long-term survival. Internal Medicine, 59(11), 1433–1435. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.4232-19

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