Immunotherapy for metastatic liver disease from colorectal carcinoma: case series from the Middle East

Abstract

Immunotherapy poses new considerations and alterations to the management of metastatic colorectal carcinoma (mCRC), where chemotherapy achieves complete radiological response but yields complete pathological response in few patients only. Immunotherapy may be superior in the conversion of unresectable disease to resectable liver lesions from mCRC and downsizing borderline lesions for more feasible resectability and achieving complete pathologic response, with the potential for cure and to alter current, established guidelines for surgical resection with a shift from chemotherapy. We present two patients with hepatic lesions from mCRC characterized by deficient mismatch repair (dMMR) which were unresectable after traditional chemotherapy but were converted to resectable lesions with a complete histopathological response following immunotherapy. Complete histopathologic response and radiologic regression or disappearance of liver lesions was observed in patients with dMMR mCRC after pembrolizumab. Immunotherapy exhibits notable potential for cure, achieving complete, successful surgical resection and improving prognosis. Published by Oxford University Press and JSCR Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved. © The Author(s) 2022.

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Bevacizumab, Capecitabine plus oxaliplatin, Dna mismatch repair protein msh2, Fluorouracil, Folinic acid, Mismatch repair protein pms2, Mutl protein homolog 1, Oxaliplatin, Pembrolizumab, Protein msh6, Adult, Article, Cancer chemotherapy, Cancer immunotherapy, Case report, Clinical article, Colorectal carcinoma, Computer assisted tomography, Female, Follow up, Histopathology, Human, Human tissue, Immunohistochemistry, Liver injury, Liver metastasis, Male, Metastasis resection, Metastatic colorectal cancer, Mismatch repair, Multiple cycle treatment, Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, Protein expression, Subtotal colectomy

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