Laureline Wetterwald, Sotirios Papadopoulos, Georgia Tsoumakidou, Sarah Boughdad, Daniela Ferraro, Pantelis Koulouris, Stephane Cherix, Rafael Duran, Antonia Digklia
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Metastatic dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDLPS) is primarily managed with chemotherapy, yet with poor response rate. Locoregional therapies, such as radiotherapy and percutaneous cryoablation, can provide palliation for inoperable metastatic sarcomas. In rare instances, those ablative therapies can elicit an immune-mediated regression of untreated metastases in a process named the abscopal effect. With the growing use of immunotherapy, reports on the abscopal effect have become more frequent during the last decade.
Case description: A 55-year-old patient with no prior medical history was diagnosed with a stage IV DDLPS. The patient was first treated with induction chemotherapy followed by en bloc resection and adjuvant radiotherapy. After two local relapses treated with chemotherapy, the patient developed a systemic disease progression. While progressing on immunochemotherapy, the patient underwent palliative percutaneous cryoablation. Three months after the procedure, the 18fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18FDG PET/CT) showed regression of the distant metastasis alongside the regression of the cryoablated tumor, suggesting an abscopal effect.
Conclusions: The occurrence of the abscopal effect after progressive disease suggests that cryoablation triggered a systemic immune response, highlighting the potential of this treatment combination. However, it remains a rare phenomenon, and further research and clinical trials are required to determine optimal treatment sequencing.
期刊介绍:
The Annals of Translational Medicine (Ann Transl Med; ATM; Print ISSN 2305-5839; Online ISSN 2305-5847) is an international, peer-reviewed Open Access journal featuring original and observational investigations in the broad fields of laboratory, clinical, and public health research, aiming to provide practical up-to-date information in significant research from all subspecialties of medicine and to broaden the readers’ vision and horizon from bench to bed and bed to bench. It is published quarterly (April 2013- Dec. 2013), monthly (Jan. 2014 - Feb. 2015), biweekly (March 2015-) and openly distributed worldwide. Annals of Translational Medicine is indexed in PubMed in Sept 2014 and in SCIE in 2018. Specific areas of interest include, but not limited to, multimodality therapy, epidemiology, biomarkers, imaging, biology, pathology, and technical advances related to medicine. Submissions describing preclinical research with potential for application to human disease, and studies describing research obtained from preliminary human experimentation with potential to further the understanding of biological mechanism underlying disease are encouraged. Also warmly welcome are studies describing public health research pertinent to clinic, disease diagnosis and prevention, or healthcare policy. With a focus on interdisciplinary academic cooperation, ATM aims to expedite the translation of scientific discovery into new or improved standards of management and health outcomes practice.