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Pathological changes related to Imatinib treatment in a patient with a metastatic gastrointestinal stromal tumour.

Abdulkader Nallib, Ihab; Cameselle Teijeiro, Jose Manuel; Forteza Vila, Jerónimo
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/22323
PMID: 15810964
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2559.2005.02014.x
ISSN: 0309-0167
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Histopathology . 2005 Apr;46(4):470-2. (587.1Kb)
VERSIÓN DEL EDITOR (68.20Kb)
Date issued
2005-04
Journal title
Histopathology
 
HISTOPATHOLOGY [ISSN:0309-0167]
 
Type of content
Artigo
DeCS
inmunohistoquímica | pirimidinas | humanos | metástasis neoplásica | mediana edad | benzamidas | resultado del tratamiento | antineoplásicos | tirosina | ependimoma | proteínas protooncogénicas c-kit | piperacinas | tumores del estroma gastrointestinal
MeSH
Ependymoma | Imatinib Mesylate | Benzamides | Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumors | Humans | Antineoplastic Agents | Middle Aged | Jordan | Male | Pyrimidines | Northern Ireland | Neoplasm Metastasis | Piperazines | Immunohistochemistry | Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-kit | Treatment Outcome | Tyrosine
Abstract
Gastrointestinal stromal tumors (GISTs) are a distinct tumor type driven by activating mutations in c-kit (detected via CD117 immunohistochemistry) or, less commonly, PDGFRA, leading to constitutive kinase activation that promotes tumor growth. Imatinib mesylate (Gleevec/Glivec), a tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting c-kit, PDGFRA, and other kinases, has shown remarkable efficacy in advanced GISTs. This report describes a 54-year-old man with metastatic GIST who underwent gastrectomy in 1999 and partial hepatectomy for liver metastases in 2001. In 2003, a new hepatic metastasis was treated with imatinib (600 mg daily) for 24 weeks, followed by resection. Post-treatment histology revealed dramatic changes: marked reduction in tumor cell density, replacement by myxohyaline stroma, absence of mitoses, necrosis, or inflammation. Only rare residual cells were CD117-positive, with no Ki-67 (MIB-1) proliferation marker expression—contrasting sharply with pre-treatment high-density, proliferative tumor. These findings align with broader evidence from clinical trials (e.g., partial responses in ~54% of patients, stable disease in ~28%) and other reports, where imatinib induces hypocellular myxoid/sclerohyaline stroma, variable hemorrhage/necrosis/cystic changes, reduced CD117 expression, and lowered proliferative index—sometimes achieving near-complete histological remission. The morphological spectrum underscores imatinib's effectiveness in inhibiting the c-kit pathway, offering a promising targeted therapy for advanced/metastatic GISTs.

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