Successful salvage surgery followed by second ALK-TKI after alectinib failure in a patient with ALK-positive NSCLC

Surg Case Rep. 2022 Apr 2;8(1):59. doi: 10.1186/s40792-022-01408-7.

Abstract

Background: Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) have been approved for the therapy of locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) caused by ALK rearrangement. However, its treatment after failure of initial ALK-TKI therapy remains controversial.

Case presentation: A 47-year-old woman with a hemosputum was diagnosed with adenocarcinoma of the left lung (cT2bN3M0, stage IIIB). Gene mutation analysis indicated positive ALK translocation. Alectinib was selected as the first-line treatment. Although the treatment effect was determined as a partial response, the main tumor regrew. Alectinib was discontinued, and salvage surgery was performed without causing morbidity. The pathological diagnosis was pleomorphic carcinoma without lymph node metastasis (yp-T2bN0). After surgery, lorlatinib was administered as the second-line treatment for 8 months until the patient could not tolerate continuation. Computed tomography scan revealed no lung cancer recurrence 14 months after discontinuation.

Conclusions: Our experience with this case suggests that salvage surgery after alectinib treatment followed by lorlatinib therapy may be effective for initially unresectable ALK-positive NSCLC.

Keywords: Alectinib; Anaplastic lymphoma kinase; Lorlatinib; Lung cancer; Salvage surgery; Tyrosine kinase inhibitor.