Abildgaardthorpe9540
Pyomyositis has recently been recognized as a primary infection of the large skeletal muscles, and it is often accompanied by single or multiple intramuscular abscess formation. Immunocompromised patients, including those with diabetes mellitus, human immunodeficiency virus infection, and cancer, as well as those undergoing chemotherapy, are at a greater risk of developing pyomyositis. A 78-year-old Japanese man with recurrent gastric cancer being treated with chemotherapy presented with sudden-onset pain in his left lower extremity while undergoing a second-line regimen with irinotecan. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed an abnormally high-intensity signal in the left internal and external obturator muscles, a finding consistent with pyomyositis. Following intensive antibiotic treatment, the patient recovered completely and was able to resume chemotherapy with irinotecan. For a patient who developed pyomyositis during chemotherapy for gastric cancer, early diagnosis using MRI followed by administration of timely intensive antibiotic therapy resulted in complete recovery.The clinicopathological breast cancer subtypes are used in clinical practice to better anticipate biological behaviour and guide systemic treatment strategy. In the adjuvant setting, genomic assay recurrence scores became widely available for luminal-like disease. Recently, next-generation sequencing (NGS) platforms have been used, essentially, in more advanced disease setting, in situations refractory to conventional treatment, or even in rare cancers for which there are no established treatment guidelines. Moreover, subpopulations of cancer cells with unique genomes within the same patient may exist across different regions of a tumour or evolve over time, which is called intratumoural heterogeneity. We herein report a case of a 38-year-old woman with breast cancer whose primary and metastatic disease exhibited discordant expression of hormone receptors, with the former being positive and the latter negative. Furthermore, the NGS analysis revealed slight and dynamic changes of mutational profiles between different metastatic lesions, potentially impacting breast cancer management and prognosis. These alterations may reflect tissular and temporal changes in tumour subclones and may also be due to the selective pressure caused by antineoplastic treatment. The use of genomic analyses in order to improve cancer treatment has been studied prospectively with encouraging results. The widespread use of NGS tests in clinical practice also creates new challenges. The most relevant may be to know which genomic alterations detected should be valued and how they should be targeted.Epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (EHE) is a rare tumor of the vascular endothelial cells. It can originate from any tissue; however, it occurs most frequently in the liver and lung. Pleural epithelioid hemangioendothelioma (PEH), EHE developing from pleura, is even more infrequent and less reported in the literature. In the following report, we discuss a 40-year-old man who initially presented with right-sided chest pain. Computed tomography revealed pleural thickening and effusion in his right thoracic cavity. PEH diagnosis was confirmed with immunohistochemistry. In order to provide the readers with an inclusive understanding of the disease, we collected the PEH cases reported in the literature. Despite the scarcity of the reported PEH cases (to our best knowledge), the compiled literature review of the disease enables the readers to grasp a better comprehension of the disease.Through elucidating the genetic mechanisms of drug sensitivity, precision medicine aims to improve patient selection and response to therapy. Exceptional responders are patients that exhibit exquisite and durable responses to targeted therapy, providing a rare opportunity to identify the molecular basis of drug sensitivity. We identified an exceptional responder to everolimus, an oral inhibitor of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway, in a patient with advanced renal cell carcinoma. Through whole-exome sequencing on pretreatment and metastatic tumor DNA, we identified alterations in several mTOR pathway genes, with several mutations implicated in mTOR activation. Importantly, these alterations are currently not included in commercially available next-generation sequencing panels, suggesting that precision medicine is still limited in its ability to predict responses to mTOR-targeted therapies. Further research to discover and validate predictive biomarkers of response to everolimus and other targeted therapies is urgently needed. Given the rarity of patients with exceptional responses to targeted agents, cooperative efforts to understand the molecular basis for these phenotypes are essential.This case discusses a 62-year-old woman with de novo metastatic lung adenocarcinoma (PD-L1 >50% with a KRAS G12C mutation, ALK and EGFR negative) who was on pembrolizumab for 1 year without any significant toxicity, only low-grade dermatitis and hypothyroidism. She was transitioned to pembrolizumab every 6 weeks at 4 mg/kg and began to develop oral sores shortly thereafter. The sores proved refractory to nystatin and mouth rinses containing corticosteroids, and the patient was ultimately diagnosed with autoimmune-triggered lichen planus. Unfortunately, her symptoms also proved refractory to typical treatments for lichen planus and worsened to the point where she began to develop cutaneous lesions and difficulty swallowing. Unfortunately, she also developed a keratoacanthoma that required excision. The pembrolizumab was stopped, and the patient's symptoms improved with 5 days of systemic prednisone, metronidazole, and triamcinolone oral paste. Her NSCLC remains stable off active treatment for 6 months. This case study is on rare auto-immune toxicity as well as a keratoacanthoma from anti-PD-(L) 1 blockade, accompanied by sustained treatment response after cessation of the offending drug.Pregnancy with choriocarcinoma is a rare tumor. It is rare for neonates to survive the third trimester. This article reports the clinical data of a live fetal pregnancy with choriocarcinoma complicated by brain and lung metastases. The patient was admitted to the hospital for "menopause 28 weeks + 5 days, dizziness with nausea and vomiting 2 days." After 5 hours of admission, the patient had sudden convulsions, urinary incontinence, and coma. A head computed tomography (CT) examination in the emergency department revealed a cerebral hemorrhage in the right occipital lobe and broke into the ventricular system with brain herniation. She was immediately transferred to the intensive care unit for the emergency cesarean section and intracerebral hematoma removal. A postoperative CT scan revealed that the tumor in the upper lobe of the right lung was considered lung cancer, with multiple metastases in both lungs. Postoperative pathology was metastatic choriocarcinoma tissue seen in the blood clot. Based on the pathological diagnosis of choriocarcinoma, a chemotherapy regimen was developed with 2 courses of EP regimen and 8 courses of combined EMA-CO chemotherapy regimen. The patients were followed up for 2 years and ultimately resolved.A 34-year-old woman with a rapidly growing right breast mass visited our hospital. The mass was diagnosed as a right breast cancer (cT3N1M0 stage ⦀A). Her serum leucocyte count and C-reactive protein levels were high, and she had persistent fever. However, serum procalcitonin and β-D-glucan levels were normal, and no apparent infection focus was detected, although her serum granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) level was markedly elevated to 42.7 pg/mL. Therefore, a G-CSF-producing breast cancer was suspected. A pathological analysis of the surgical specimen revealed a squamous cell carcinoma of the breast (pT2N0 [i+] M0 stage ∥A). Right mastectomy (with the resection of the pectoralis major muscle), axillary lymph node dissection, and split layer grafting were performed. The leucocyte count and serum G-CSF level decreased on postoperative day (POD) 1 and normalized on POD 6. As adjuvant chemotherapy, 4 cycles of a combination chemotherapy with adriamycin and cyclophosphamide and 12 cycles of weekly paclitaxel were administered. After chemotherapy, the patient also underwent postmastectomy radiotherapy. Currently, 30 months after surgery, the patient is alive and well with neither progression nor distant metastasis. G-CSF-producing breast cancers tend to rapidly grow such as in the current case; thus, surgery should be performed immediately, followed by appropriate adjuvant treatment.Fanconi anemia (FA) is characterized clinically by bone marrow failure, congenital malformations, sensitivity to DNA cross-linking agents, and increased risk of malignancy. Hematological cancer is the best-described malignancy in patients with FA, but the susceptibility to the development of solid tumors is also well documented, especially after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). With regard to the development of solid tumors in patients with FA, head and neck, esophageal, and anal squamous cell carcinoma are well known, but reports of lung cancer are extremely rare. Here, we describe an FA patient with a history of HSCT that developed 3 serial cancers - oral, esophageal, and nonsmall cell lung cancer - over a period of 6 years. The third lesion was nonsmall cell lung cancer and its location corresponded closely to the field of irradiation treatment for prior esophageal cancer. The occurrence of lung cancer in patients with FA is uncommon, but FA patients should be screened regularly and serially. Our case also indicated the importance of the irradiated field as a location for subsequent cancer development.Lactate is a byproduct of anaerobic glycolysis, and hyperlactatemia is commonly seen in critically ill patients. We report a case of an elderly male presenting with undifferentiated constitutional symptoms, anemia, thrombocytopenia, severe lactic acidosis, refractory hypoglycemia, and a newly detected abdominal mass. A dedicated workup ruled out infectious etiologies and revealed metastatic non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. This study explores etiologies of type B lactic acidosis in oncology patients, with a focus on Warburg's effect, and its potential for prognostication.We report a case of Birt-Hogg-Dube syndrome (BHDS), a rare hereditary syndrome, the main visible sign of which is the development of multiple skin fibrofolliculomas. In our case, there was a manifestation of BHDS consisting in the absence of fibrofolliculomas and presence of other characteristic features of this syndrome lung cysts and renal cancer. The 26-year-old woman was admitted to a clinic for diagnosis and treatment of a neoplasm of the left kidney and had a history of renal cell cancer (RCC) of the right kidney and spontaneous pneumothorax. Multiple tumors of the left kidney and lung cysts were observed upon clinical and laboratory testing. Tumors of the left kidney were resected and diagnosed by a pathologist as chromophobe RCC. Sequencing of FLCN exons 4-14 from blood DNA revealed the heterozygous germline nonsense mutation c.1429C>T (p.R477*), confirming the diagnosis of BHDS. Several somatic variants were detected by tumor DNA sequencing using the Comprehensive Cancer Panel and Ion S5 platform. Medical-genetic counseling was conducted, and follow-up management was outlined.