BACKGROUND Neuroendocrine gastrointestinal tumors(NETs)are rare and have different natural behaviors.Surgery is the gold standard treatment for local disease while radiotherapy has been demonstrated to be ineffective....BACKGROUND Neuroendocrine gastrointestinal tumors(NETs)are rare and have different natural behaviors.Surgery is the gold standard treatment for local disease while radiotherapy has been demonstrated to be ineffective.Poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas(NECs)represent only 5%-10%of digestive NETS.Due to aggressive growth and rapid metastatic diffusion,early diagnosis and a multidisciplinary approach are mandatory.The role of surgery and radiotherapy in this setting is still debated,and chemotherapy remains the treatment of choice.CASE SUMMARY A 42-year-old male with an ulcerated bleeding rectal lesion was diagnosed with a NEC G3(Ki67 index>90%)on May 2015 and initially treated with 3 cycles of first-line chemotherapy,but showed early local progressive disease at 3 mo and underwent sphincter-sparing open anterior low rectal resection.In September 2015,the first post-surgery total-body computed tomography(CT)scan showed an early pelvic disease relapse.Therefore,systemic chemotherapy with FOLFIRI was started and the patient obtained only a partial response.This was followed by pelvic radiotherapy(50 Gy).On April 2016,a CT scan and 18F-fluorodeoxy-glucose positron emission tomography imaging showed a complete response(CR)of the pelvic lesion,but pathological abdominal inter-aortocaval lymph nodes were observed.Due to disease progression of abdominal malignant nodes,the patient received radiotherapy at 45 Gy,and finally obtained a CR.As of January 2021,the patient has no symptoms of relapse and no late toxicity after chemotherapy or radiotherapy.CONCLUSION This case demonstrates how a multimodal approach can be successful in obtaining long-term CR in metastatic sites in patients with high grade digestive NECs.展开更多
文摘BACKGROUND Neuroendocrine gastrointestinal tumors(NETs)are rare and have different natural behaviors.Surgery is the gold standard treatment for local disease while radiotherapy has been demonstrated to be ineffective.Poorly differentiated neuroendocrine carcinomas(NECs)represent only 5%-10%of digestive NETS.Due to aggressive growth and rapid metastatic diffusion,early diagnosis and a multidisciplinary approach are mandatory.The role of surgery and radiotherapy in this setting is still debated,and chemotherapy remains the treatment of choice.CASE SUMMARY A 42-year-old male with an ulcerated bleeding rectal lesion was diagnosed with a NEC G3(Ki67 index>90%)on May 2015 and initially treated with 3 cycles of first-line chemotherapy,but showed early local progressive disease at 3 mo and underwent sphincter-sparing open anterior low rectal resection.In September 2015,the first post-surgery total-body computed tomography(CT)scan showed an early pelvic disease relapse.Therefore,systemic chemotherapy with FOLFIRI was started and the patient obtained only a partial response.This was followed by pelvic radiotherapy(50 Gy).On April 2016,a CT scan and 18F-fluorodeoxy-glucose positron emission tomography imaging showed a complete response(CR)of the pelvic lesion,but pathological abdominal inter-aortocaval lymph nodes were observed.Due to disease progression of abdominal malignant nodes,the patient received radiotherapy at 45 Gy,and finally obtained a CR.As of January 2021,the patient has no symptoms of relapse and no late toxicity after chemotherapy or radiotherapy.CONCLUSION This case demonstrates how a multimodal approach can be successful in obtaining long-term CR in metastatic sites in patients with high grade digestive NECs.