Filter by keywords:



Filtering documents. Please wait...

1/8. Cerebral relapse of metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumor during treatment with imatinib mesylate: case report.

    BACKGROUND: The management of unresectable or metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) has previously been difficult as they are resistant to conventional chemotherapy and radiation. The development of imatinib mesylate has made a major impact on the management of advanced GISTs. It is apparent that there are sanctuary sites such as the central nervous system where imatinib does not achieve adequate concentrations. We describe the case of a man with metastatic GIST who experienced multiple cerebral relapses of disease while systemic disease progression appeared to be controlled by imatinib. CASE PRESENTATION: A 47-year-old man presented in July 1999 with a jejunal GIST with multiple hepatic metastases. The jejunal primary was resected and after unsuccessful cytoreductive chemotherapy, the liver metastases were also resected in December 1999. The patient subsequently relapsed in August 2001 with symptomatic hepatic, subcutaneous gluteal, left choroidal and right ocular metastases all confirmed on CT and PET scanning. biopsy confirmed recurrent GIST. MRI and lumbar puncture excluded central nervous system involvement. The patient was commenced on imatinib 400 mg bd in September 2001 through a clinical trial.The symptoms improved with objective PET and CT scan response until December 2002 when the patient developed a right-sided foot drop. MRI scan showed a left parasagittal tumor which was resected and confirmed histologically to be metastatic GIST. Imatinib was ceased pre-operatively due to the trial protocol but recommenced in February 2003 on a compassionate use program. The left parasagittal metastasis recurred and required subsequent re-excision in September 2003 and January 2004. Control of the systemic GIST was temporarily lost on reduction of the dose of imatinib (due to limited drug supply) but on increasing the dose back to 800 mg per day, systemic disease was stabilized for a period of time before generalised progression occurred. CONCLUSION: This case illustrates that the brain can be a sanctuary site to treatment of GISTs with imatinib. Maintaining dosing of imatinib in the face of isolated sites of disease progression is also important, as other metastatic sites may still be sensitive.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1
keywords = disease progression, progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

2/8. PET scanning evaluation of response to imatinib mesylate therapy in gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) patients.

    BACKGROUND: Unresectable or metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) exhibit a dynamic clinical course, with no evidence of benefit from any standard cytotoxic chemotherapy and an inevitably fatal outcome. With the introduction of Imatinib, an oral drug able to inhibit the KIT receptor tyrosine kinase, new questions arise regarding our ability to monitor treatment response with conventional methods and optimally manage such patients on treatment with new agents. MATERIALS AND methods: Herein we report two cases of patients with a history of GIST in treatment with Imatinib. RESULTS: After 4 weeks from treatment start, CT scan evaluation demonstrated a massive increase in the size of metastatic lesions, but a confirmatory PET excluded, in both patients, the presence of any metabolic activity in the previously known metastatic sites. Imatinib therapy was continued with subjective clinical benefit for 12 further months before a PET scan-confirmed disease progression had occurred in one patient and is still ongoing after 15 months in the other. CONCLUSION: These cases open the obvious question of whether conventional imaging techniques are adequate to assess the response to Imatinib treatment in GIST patients.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.49887596662163
keywords = disease progression, progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

3/8. Adverse reactions during imatinib and lansoprazole treatment in gastrointestinal stromal tumors.

    OBJECTIVE: To report the case of a patient affected by gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GIST) who developed cutaneous adverse drug reactions during treatment with imatinib and lansoprazole. CASE SUMMARY: After 2 months of treatment with imatinib 400 mg/day, a 60-year-old white female affected by GIST developed bilateral palpebral edema with hyperemic conjunctivae and labial edema when lansoprazole 15 mg/day was introduced to treat dyspeptic symptomatology. Treatment was discontinued, and on reintroduction of both drugs, the patient developed stevens-johnson syndrome. Two months later, generalized cutaneous reactions appeared immediately following reintroduction of low-dose imatinib with corticosteroid plus lansoprazole treatment. After discontinuation of all drugs, with the exception of the corticosteroid, the progression of cutaneous lesions stopped. DISCUSSION: The use of imatinib is commonly associated with a high dose-dependent rate of rash and edema. Several cases of stevens-johnson syndrome have also been described, although not in patients affected by GIST. Severe skin reactions have been reported for lansoprazole including erythema multiforme, stevens-johnson syndrome, and toxic epidermal necrolysis. Applying Naranjo's algorithm, the adverse events were considered possible due to imatinib and probable due to lansoprazole. CONCLUSIONS: On the basis of the data reported, we conclude that the adverse reactions described may be attributed to either drug alone. However, combined use of drugs may increase the risk of onset of these adverse reactions due to a potential drug interaction involving CYP3A4.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.0022480667567436
keywords = progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

4/8. Familial gastrointestinal stromal tumor syndrome: phenotypic and molecular features in a kindred.

    PURPOSE: Members of a family with hereditary gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) and a germline KIT oncogene mutation were evaluated for other potential syndrome manifestations. A tumor from the proband was analyzed to compare features with sporadic GISTs. patients AND methods: Members of a kindred in which six relatives in four consecutive generations comprised an autosomal dominant pattern of documented GISTs and cutaneous lesions underwent physical examination, imaging studies, and germline KIT analysis. A recurrent GIST from the proband was studied using microarray, karyotypic, immunohistochemical, and immunoblotting techniques. RESULTS: In addition to evidence of multiple GISTs, lentigines, malignant melanoma, and an angioleiomyoma were identified in relatives. A previously reported gain-of-function missense mutation in KIT exon 11 (T --> C) that results in a V559A substitution within the juxtamembrane domain was identified in three family members. The proband's recurrent gastric GIST had a 44,XY-14,-22 karyotype and immunohistochemical evidence of strong diffuse cytoplasmic KIT expression without expression of actin, desmin, or S-100. immunoblotting showed strong expression of phosphorylated KIT and downstream signaling intermediates (AKT and MAPK) at levels comparable with those reported in sporadic GISTs. cDNA array profiling demonstrated clustering with sporadic GISTs, and expression of GIST markers comparable to sporadic GISTs. CONCLUSION: These studies provide the first evidence that gene expression and mechanisms of cytogenetic progression and cell signaling are indistinguishable in familial and sporadic GISTs. Current investigations of molecularly targeted therapies in GIST patients provide opportunities to increase the understanding of features of the hereditary syndrome, and risk factors and molecular pathways of the neoplastic phenotypes.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.0022480667567436
keywords = progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

5/8. Changing phenotype of gastrointestinal stromal tumours under imatinib mesylate treatment: a potential diagnostic pitfall.

    AIMS: The diagnosis of gastrointesinal stromal tumours (GISTs) is widely based on morphological features and KIT (CD117) immunoreactivity. Most patients with advanced GISTs show a major clinical response after treatment with imatinib mesylate. The histopathological features of GISTs in patients on prolonged imatinib treatment have, thus far, not been addressed in detail. In this report, we present three patients with metastatic GISTs, who received more than 1 year of therapy with imatinib, and whose tumours changed their morphological and immunohistochemical characteristics during continued treatment with the drug. methods AND RESULTS: All three primary GISTs from these patients were classical spindle-type tumours, showing diffuse, strong CD117, CD34, and focal alpha-smooth muscle actin expression. During treatment, two clinically progressive and one clinically stable GIST revealed a diffuse epithelioid, or pseudopapillary epithelioid growth pattern, characterized by rounded cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and uniform round-to-ovoid nuclei. In addition, GIST specimens from patients on therapy showed complete loss of CD117 immunoreactivity. Remarkably, two of these tumours also became CD34 immunonegative and in one case the progression was accompanied by desmin expression. KIT mutational analysis revealed the presence of distinct exon 11 mutant isoforms in all cases examined, while the same genotype was sustained in the base line and on-therapy tumour specimens, proving the common origin of analysed specimens. CONCLUSIONS: GISTs subject to imatinib treatment can undergo striking (immuno)phenotypic changes, which are not necessarily corroborated by new genotypic modifications. Because these may mimic other tumour types, this feature creates a differential diagnostic challenge, of which the pathologist should be aware.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.0022480667567436
keywords = progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

6/8. gastrointestinal stromal tumors: insights from a new familial GIST kindred with unusual genetic and pathologic features.

    Familial gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) is a rare autosomal dominant genetic disorder. We report the second family to date with a germline point mutation in exon 17 of the KIT gene that leads to substitution of aspartic acid at position 820 with tyrosine (D820Y). One or more GISTs was documented in three generations of this kindred, and there was associated hyperplasia of the interstitial cells of cajal (ICC). One affected family member complained of dysphagia and another suffered small intestinal diverticulosis with perforation, which may represent additional consequences of ICC hyperplasia. Diffuse and nodular ICC hyperplasia associated with the latter family member's small intestinal diverticulosis is illustrated, providing supportive functional and morphologic evidence for the ICC being the cell of origin of GISTs. skin hyperpigmentation was not observed. Analysis of a 17-cm malignant GIST in the index patient revealed that it was hemi/homozygous for the germline D820Y mutation, indicating loss of the remaining wild-type KIT allele with tumor progression. Two smaller lesions from this patient were heterozygous for the mutation. This phenomenon has been observed in up to 8% of sporadic malignant GISTs but has not been documented in familial disease.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.0022480667567436
keywords = progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

7/8. Management of gastrointestinal stromal tumors in the imatinib era: selected case studies.

    The introduction of imatinib, an orally administered inhibitor of the KIT receptor tyrosine kinase, is prompting revision of the management algorithms that have traditionally guided the treatment of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). Historically, patients with GISTs have had substantial rates of relapse as well as limited long-term survival even after complete surgical resection of a primary tumor. Imatinib has been shown to induce durable tumor responses in more than half of the patients with malignant metastatic or unresectable GISTs and to halt disease progression in an additional third. These encouraging results have led to the initiation of clinical trials of imatinib as an adjuvant or neoadjuvant therapy with surgery. Until relevant data are reported to provide definitive direction for the management of operable or potentially operable GISTs, treatment decisions must be made on the basis of the available evidence and clinical experience with imatinib. This paper presents selected case studies describing approaches to the combined use of surgery and systemic therapy that have been applied in the treatment of individual GIST patients. The management of GIST in these cases required a coordinated, multidisciplinary approach involving medical oncologists, diagnostic radiologists, gastroenterologists, surgeons, and pathologists.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 0.49887596662163
keywords = disease progression, progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)

8/8. Response evaluation in gastrointestinal stromal tumours treated with imatinib: misdiagnosis of disease progression on CT due to cystic change in liver metastases.

    Imatinib is a highly effective treatment for patients with metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumours (GIST). In most instances, response to imatinib treatment is assessed with CT. We present two cases where CT demonstrated the appearance of new low density liver lesions after 8-12 weeks of imatinib treatment. While this finding is consistent with progressive disease due to new lesions appearing at a previously uninvolved site, we hypothesise that the appearance of new liver lesions is in fact due to cystic change within previously occult, solid metastases. These untreated solid metastases were not visible on conventional portal phase CT due to their small size and vascular nature. Our hypothesis is supported by the observation that extrahepatic sites of disease had reduced in size over the same period of imatinib treatment and by the subsequent disease outcomes of these two cases. One patient, who continued imatinib because of significant symptomatic improvement despite the CT findings, remained stable on the same dose of imatinib for 18 months. The other patient, whose disease progressed when imatinib was withdrawn, had a dramatic response to treatment when imatinib was restarted at the same dose 2 years later. It is important that radiologists and oncologists who are involved in the management of GIST recognize that the appearance of new, low-density liver lesions on CT may represent a response to treatment. This finding must be correlated with symptomatic response and with tumour sites outside the liver before erroneously withdrawing effective imatinib treatment.
- - - - - - - - - -
ranking = 1.9955038664865
keywords = disease progression, progression
(Clic here for more details about this article)


Leave a message about 'Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.