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Authors Wang Y, Liu S, Wei X, Yan B, Li J, Su Z, Liu A, Zhang Y
Received 8 February 2018
Accepted for publication 23 May 2018
Published 10 August 2018 Volume 2018:11 Pages 4733—4738
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/OTT.S164968
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Amy Norman
Peer reviewer comments 2
Editor who approved publication: Dr Arseniy Yuzhalin
Rationale: Leptomeningeal metastasis (LM) is an important cause of mortality
in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). As the symptoms of LM
and its early clinical manifestations are nonspecific, early diagnosis of LM is
difficult. However, there are few treatment options for LM, which leads to a
poor prognosis; thus, increased clinical attention is necessary. The effects of
most systemic chemotherapies on metastatic brain tumors (brain metastases and
LMs) are limited as they cannot pass the blood–brain barrier; therefore,
whole-brain radiation therapy is a therapeutic option. Osimertinib is a potent
and irreversible third-generation oral epidermal growth factor receptor
tyrosine kinase inhibitor (EGFR-TKI). It binds to EGFR with high affinity when
the EGFR T790M mutation is present together with sensitizing mutations. The clinical
efficacy of osimertinib in NSCLC patients carrying the T790M mutation has been
demonstrated in clinical trial NCT02468661. Intrathecal injection of
chemotherapeutic drugs can be directed to a specific lesion. Temozolomide is
one such drug, and its effect has been confirmed.
Patient and
interventions: We treated a 38-year-old
patient with NSCLC who carried the EGFR L858R mutation. We administered a
combination of oral osimertinib and oral temozolomide plus an intrathecal
injection of cytarabine and whole-brain radiation therapy for symptomatic
multiple brain metastases.
Outcomes: The patient showed a marked response to this combination therapy.
To date (after ~18 months), no recurrence or new lesions have been observed and
he is asymptomatic. His disease-free survival surpasses that achieved with any
monotherapy for LM.
Lessons: This is the first report to demonstrate the response to
combination therapy in an NSCLC patient with LM. These findings indicate the
potential utility of chemotherapy combined with radiotherapy combined with
targeted therapy combined with local treatment, as each treatment acts via a
different mechanism, enhancing their therapeutic effects.
Keywords: intrathecal injection, meningeal metastasis osimertinib, non-small
cell lung cancer, temozolomide, WBRT