Long-term adjuvant imatinib treatment for a patient who underwent complete resection of a localized recurrent gastrointestinal stromal tumor after preoperative imatinib treatment: A case report

4Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Rationale:The efficiency and tolerance of long-term adjuvant imatinib treatment for patient who underwent complete resection of a localized recurrent gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) was unknown.Patient concerns:A 45-year-old man underwent complete resection of an intestinal GIST in August 2001. Four years later, a giant (11×8×6cm) recurrent GIST located in the retroperitoneum was detected.Diagnosis:The recurrent tumor was positive for CD117 by immunohistochemistry.Interventions:The recurrent tumor was completely resected after 4 months of effective imatinib treatment (400mg/day), and the patient continued imatinib treatment postoperatively. In June 2011, imatinib treatment was stopped for 3 weeks because of hepatitis B infection, and resumed with a reduced dose level of 300mg/day when liver function recovered. In March 2017, imatinib treatment was interrupted again for 12 days because the patient underwent cholecystectomy.Outcomes:In December 2017, a computed tomography scan showed no signs of tumor recurrence. To date, the patient has been under adjuvant imatinib treatment for >12 years without severe side effects. The plasma concentration of imatinib (detected in February 2018) was trough concentration (Cmin) 1015.7ng/mL and peak concentration (Cmax) 1550.5ng/mL.Lessons:This case report highlights the active role of long-term (>12 years) imatinib treatment after complete resection of localized recurrent GIST.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Tjhoi, W. E. H., Li, K., Shou, C. H., Yang, W. L., & Yu, J. R. (2019). Long-term adjuvant imatinib treatment for a patient who underwent complete resection of a localized recurrent gastrointestinal stromal tumor after preoperative imatinib treatment: A case report. Medicine (United States), 98(6). https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000014477

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free