Right pneumonectomy under ECMO followed by molecularly guided immunotherapy achieved sustained disease stability for over 65 months in a patient with MSI-high pulmonary artery sarcoma.
Case Report (n=1)
Does surgery combined with molecularly guided immunotherapy improve survival in a patient with MSI-high pulmonary artery sarcoma and Lynch syndrome?
Surgery combined with molecularly guided immunotherapy can achieve long-term survival in rare MSI-high pulmonary artery sarcomas associated with Lynch syndrome.
This report describes a rare case of a vascular-origin malignant tumor (intimal sarcoma or carcinosarcoma) extending from the right pulmonary hilum along the pulmonary artery in a 44-year-old man. The patient underwent right pneumonectomy under extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support and achieved long-term survival through molecularly guided immunotherapy. His medical history included two early-onset colorectal cancers and a family history of malignancy, suggesting an underlying hereditary cancer syndrome. The tumor exhibited microsatellite instability-high (MSI-high) status and a high tumor mutational burden (TMB-high) with low PD-L1 expression but responded favorably to immune checkpoint inhibitors, including ipilimumab plus nivolumab and pembrolizumab, achieving sustained disease stability for over 65 months. Comprehensive genomic profiling conducted as part of a branch study later in the disease course revealed a pathogenic germline MLH1 variant, confirming the diagnosis of Lynch syndrome. This case underscores the importance of surgery-enabled precision oncology in the management of rare and aggressive tumors.
Nigi et al. (Thu,) conducted a case report in MSI-High pulmonary artery sarcoma with Lynch syndrome (n=1). Right pneumonectomy under ECMO and immune checkpoint inhibitors (ipilimumab, nivolumab, pembrolizumab) was evaluated on Disease stability and survival. Right pneumonectomy under ECMO followed by molecularly guided immunotherapy achieved sustained disease stability for over 65 months in a patient with MSI-high pulmonary artery sarcoma.
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