Feedback

Case report: the dissociated response and clinical benefit of primary leiomyosarcoma of the bone treated with penpulimab plus lenvatinib after failed multi-line therapy

Affiliation
Medical Oncology ,Cancer Center ,West China Hospital ,Sichuan University ,Chengdu ,China
Wang, Bin;
Affiliation
Department of Pathology ,Cancer Prevention and Treatment Institute of Chengdu ,Chengdu Fifth People’s Hospital ,The Second Clinical Medical College ,Affiliated Fifth People’s Hospital of Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ,Chengdu ,China
Han, Yin;
Affiliation
Medical Oncology ,Cancer Center ,West China Hospital ,Sichuan University ,Chengdu ,China
Liu, Jie;
Affiliation
Medical Oncology ,Cancer Center ,West China Hospital ,Sichuan University ,Chengdu ,China
Zhang, Xinyao;
Affiliation
Medical Oncology ,Cancer Center ,West China Hospital ,Sichuan University ,Chengdu ,China
Zhuo, Hongyu;
Affiliation
Medical Oncology ,Cancer Center ,West China Hospital ,Sichuan University ,Chengdu ,China
Jiang, Yu;
Affiliation
Medical Oncology ,Cancer Center ,West China Hospital ,Sichuan University ,Chengdu ,China
Deng, Yaotiao

Leiomyosarcoma occurring in the bone as primary tumor localization is extremely scarce with limited cases described in the literature, accounting for less than 0.7% of all primary bone malignancies. Once distant metastasis occurs, patients have limited treatments and often a somber prognosis, which underscore the need for innovative and effective treatment approaches. The emerging evidence suggests that anti-angiogenic therapy could inhibit angiogenesis and normalize vascular permeability in the tumor microenvironment, which, in turn, would increase immune effector cell infiltration into tumors. Immunotherapy depends on the accumulation and activity of immune effector cells within the tumor microenvironment, and immune responses and vascular normalization seem to be reciprocally regulated. Immunotherapy combined with anti-angiogenic therapy has recently made great progress in the treatment of various types of tumors. However, the effectiveness of the combination treatment in metastatic leiomyosarcoma is undetermined. In this study, we presented a rare case of primary leiomyosarcoma of the bone located in the trochanteric region of the femur, accompanied by multiple distant metastases. After the failure of multi-line therapies including AI regiments as the adjuvant chemotherapy, anlotinib as the first-line therapy, GT regiment as the second-line therapy, and eribulin as the third-line therapy, the patient received combinational therapy with penpulimab plus lenvatinib. The best efficacy for this regimen was a partial response, with a progression-free survival of 8.4 months according to the iRECIST criteria. After a dissociated response was detected without severe toxicities, the patient received local radiotherapy and continued treatment on penpulimab plus lenvatinib and eventually achieved long-term survival benefits with a total of over 60 months of overall survival with good quality of life and ongoing treatment. As our previous retrospective study found that one-third of advanced STS patients could still achieve clinical benefits from rechallenge with multi-targeted tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs), after the failure of previous TKI therapy, this case provided the potential clinical activity of immunotherapy combined with anti-angiogenic TKI rechallenge in metastatic leiomyosarcoma.

Cite

Citation style:
Could not load citation form.

Access Statistic

Total:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:
Last 12 Month:
Downloads:
Abtractviews:

Rights

License Holder: Copyright © 2023 Wang, Han, Liu, Zhang, Zhuo, Jiang and Deng.

Use and reproduction: