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Anaplastic lymphoma kinase gene rearrangements in patients with advanced‐stage non‐small‐cell lung cancer: CT characteristics and response to chemotherapy
Author(s) -
Park Jangchul,
Yamaura Hidekazu,
Yatabe Yasushi,
Hosoda Waki,
Kondo Chiaki,
Shimizu Junichi,
Horio Yoshitsugu,
Yoshida Kimihide,
Tanaka Kosuke,
Oguri Tomoyo,
Kobayashi Yoshihisa,
Hida Toyoaki
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
cancer medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.403
H-Index - 53
ISSN - 2045-7634
DOI - 10.1002/cam4.172
Subject(s) - anaplastic lymphoma kinase , chemotherapy , cancer research , stage (stratigraphy) , lymphoma , medicine , lung cancer , gene , oncology , biology , genetics , paleontology , malignant pleural effusion
Few articles have been published on the imaging findings of anaplastic lymphoma kinase ( ALK )‐positive non‐small‐cell lung cancer ( NSCLC ). To investigate the radiological findings of ALK ‐positive NSCLC in the advanced stage, CT scans were examined. In addition, the response to chemotherapy was evaluated. Of the 36 patients with ALK ‐rearranged NSCLC , a mass and a nodule were identified in 17 (47.2%) and 16 (44.4%), respectively, indicating that more than 40% had a small‐sized tumor. Overall, 31 (86.1%) patients had lymphadenopathy, seven (19.4%) had extranodal lymph node invasion, and three (8.3%) had lymphangitis. A pleural effusion was seen in 15 patients (41.7%). All but one patient had no ground‐glass opacity ( GGO ) lesions, indicating that most ALK ‐positive tumors showed a solid growth pattern without GGO on CT . Twenty were evaluable for response to chemotherapy; 10 (50.0%) had a partial response ( PR ), nine (45.0%) had stable disease ( SD ), and one (5.0%) had progressive disease ( PD ) with first‐line chemotherapy. With second‐line chemotherapy, five (26.3%) had PR , 11 (57.9%) had SD , and three (15.8%) had PD . The five patients with PR were all treated by using crizotinib. Time to progression was 8.2 months with first‐line chemotherapy, and 6.0 months with second‐line chemotherapy. Advanced‐stage ALK ‐positive tumors have a relatively aggressive phenotype, which cannot be inferred from the size of the tumor alone. ALK ‐positive patients have a good response to first‐line cytotoxic drugs and to crizotinib as second‐line therapy, but a relatively poor response to cytotoxic drugs as second‐line therapy.

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