AI Article Synopsis

  • * The case study details a patient with LS diagnosed by established criteria who developed intimal sarcoma in her left pulmonary artery and had a specific genetic variant of uncertain significance.
  • * The patient's cancer showed signs of treatment resistance, particularly in her liver metastases, indicating that the hypermutable nature of LS could lead to challenges in effectively using immune checkpoint inhibitors and cytotoxic treatments.

Article Abstract

Intimal sarcoma is an extremely rare mesenchymal tumor arising in the great vessels. To date, intimal sarcoma has not been reported in patients with Lynch syndrome (LS), even though this syndrome lacks DNA mismatch repair ability genetically and is prone to various malignancies. This patient was diagnosed with LS by the Revised Amsterdam Criteria II, and she suffered from intimal sarcoma in the left pulmonary artery. She had a germline missense variant of (c.1399G>A, pV467I) which is classified as a variant of unknown significance. In her intimal sarcoma, PMS2 expression was decreased. Additionally, it exhibited microsatellite instability and a high tumor mutational burden (69 mutations/Mb) which are features of mismatch repair deficiency, although (c.1399G>A, pV467I) missense is a variant of unknown significance. The metastatic lesions of intimal sarcoma in this patient responded heterogeneously to pembrolizumab, an immune checkpoint inhibitor. Cytotoxic agents and radiation were also effective for some metastatic lesions, but some lesions, including her liver metastases, were resistant. The hypermutable nature of the LS genotype might acquire resistance to an immune checkpoint inhibitor and other cytotoxic agents such as occurred with her liver metastases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9891846PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000528682DOI Listing

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