Abstract

BackgroundSystemic response to local anticancer treatment is a phenomenon called ‘abscopal effect’. The immune system is thought to play a pivotal role in its occurrence. To date, several cases have been reported, particularly in patients receiving combined local treatment and immune checkpoint inhibitors. In such cases, it is impossible to discriminate between the effects of local and systemic treatment. Only a few cases of abscopal effect have been described with radiotherapy alone.Case presentationHere, we report on the case of an 81-year-old woman with recurrent metastatic squamous cell carcinoma of the lung with mediastinal tumor bulk, lymph node and bone metastases. The patient refused to undergo systemic treatment, and palliative stereotactic radiotherapy of the mediastinal tumor was performed. At restaging with FDG-PET/CT, the patient presented with a decrease in size and FDG-avidity both of the irradiated site and of the lymph node and bone metastases (which did not receive radiotherapy). At 25 months after radiotherapy, the patient is still in remission at all sites.ConclusionsThis is a rare case of an abscopal effect after radiotherapy as monotherapy. It is one of the few hitherto reported for lung cancer. Several ongoing studies with a combination of radiotherapy and immunotherapy are seeking to exploit a potential synergy to induce abscopal effects.

Highlights

  • Systemic response to local anticancer treatment is a phenomenon called ‘abscopal effect’

  • This is a rare case of an abscopal effect after radiotherapy as monotherapy

  • Radiological staging with whole-body 18F-FDG-Positron emission tomography–computed tomography (PET/CT) and brain Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed metastatic disease with a strongly metabolically active primary tumor (­Maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) 16.7), pleural carcinomatosis on the left side (­SUVmax 9.4), periclavicular lymph node metastases on the left side ­(SUVmax 9.9), and bone metastases in the 12th thoracic and 4th lumbar vertebra (­SUVmax 5.0 and 4.6, respectively) (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Conclusions

This is a rare case of an abscopal effect after radiotherapy as monotherapy. It is one of the few hitherto reported for lung cancer. Several ongoing studies with a combination of radiotherapy and immunotherapy are seek‐ ing to exploit a potential synergy to induce abscopal effects

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