Pericardial Oligometastasis From Merkel Cell Carcinoma Treated With Stereotactic Ablative Radiotherapy
Jose Miguel C Callueng, Islam Mohamed, Dante D'Urbano, Benjamin Mou

TL;DR
A rare case of pericardial cancer spread from Merkel cell carcinoma was successfully treated with targeted radiation, showing long-term improvement.
Contribution
This is the longest reported response duration for pericardial oligometastasis from MCC treated with SABR.
Findings
SABR treatment led to a significant reduction in the pericardial nodule size within 2.3 months.
A clinical complete response was achieved 8.9 months post-treatment.
The patient showed a durable response with no recurrence at 40.1 months post-SABR.
Abstract
Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) is a rare and aggressive neuroendocrine skin cancer that often has a poor prognosis due to its propensity for distant metastases. A 74-year-old man with a history of MCC of the left forearm, previously treated with surgery and adjuvant radiotherapy, was found to have an asymptomatic pericardial nodule associated with pericardial effusion on routine follow-up imaging. Subsequent biopsy confirmed metastatic MCC. Restaging demonstrated no other sites of metastases. The pericardial metastasis was treated with stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) to a dose of 40 Gray (Gy) in five daily fractions. A significant decrease in the size of the pericardial nodule was observed 2.3 months post-SABR, and a clinical complete response was achieved 8.9 months post-SABR. Apart from an asymptomatic mildly increased pericardial effusion, no other acute or late adverse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolyomavirus and related diseases · MXene and MAX Phase Materials · Full-Duplex Wireless Communications
