Thoracic Cancer (Sep 2023)

A case of discordant histology and expression of programmed death ligand 1 between primary tumor and brain metastases in adenosquamous carcinoma of the lung

  • Hironori Takagi,
  • Satoshi Muto,
  • Akio Enta,
  • Mitsuro Fukuhara,
  • Shigeyuki Asano,
  • Yutaka Shio,
  • Hiroyuki Suzuki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1759-7714.15061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 26
pp. 2707 – 2711

Abstract

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Abstract A patient presented with vomiting and gait disturbance. Investigation revealed a single cerebellar tumor and another tumor in the upper lobe of the left lung. Based on the severe vomiting and gait disturbance, we removed the cerebellar tumor first, achieving resolution of symptoms. The cerebellar tumor was pathologically diagnosed as metastatic lung adenocarcinoma. No other metastases were identified, including in the mediastinal lymph nodes. We therefore resected the primary lung tumor. On final pathological analysis, the tumor in the upper lobe of the left lung was diagnosed as adenosquamous carcinoma with no lymph node metastasis. PD‐L1 expression was low in the primary lung adenosquamous carcinoma and high in the cerebellar metastasis. Furthermore, both tumors were KRASG12C‐positive. Tumor PD‐L1 expression is considered important for immune escape. In this case, adenocarcinoma cells in the primary adenosquamous carcinoma may have migrated to form a cerebellar metastasis. In advanced lung cancer, tumor growth may be observed in some lesions even when many other lesions are controlled by chemo‐ or immunotherapy. Biopsy to confirm histology and PD‐L1 expression is worth considering, depending on the location of the metastases and the invasiveness of the biopsy procedure.

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