Abstract
Preoperative imaging diagnosis is critical to planning treatment strategies; however, it is occasionally challenging and sometimes misleading. The effects of molecularly targeted therapies on imaging appearances remain uncharted. We investigated the imaging characteristics of brain metastasis during tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) administration. We analyzed the 12 cases of brain metastasis from lung cancer in our institute, including a case of a 49-year-old woman under gefitinib. Additionally, we reviewed the cases of brain metastasis from lung cancer with gefitinib treatment in the literature. A woman during five-year gefitinib treatment for postoperative recurrence of lung adenocarcinoma was found to have a cerebellar tumoral lesion incidentally on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This lesion did not harbor any peritumoral edema, along with appearing hypometabolic on fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET). This appearance was inconsistent with a typical metastatic appearance, and high-grade glioma was instead highly suspected, leading to a decision to proceed to gross total tumor resection. The pathological diagnosis, however, was brain metastasis from lung cancer. The other 11 cases without TKI treatment showed peritumoral edema on MRI and higher accumulation of FDG on PET. The two cases of brain metastasis with gefitinib in the literature showed no peritumoral edema on MRI. TKIs like gefitinib can affect tumor biology, leading to a loss of typical imaging findings such as peritumoral brain edema and hyper-metabolism. As preoperative imaging diagnosis guides us in surgical planning, including biopsy or resection, ongoing treatment information should be fully integrated into imaging interpretation.
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