# Exceptional long-term survival in an adult with advanced classic biphasic pulmonary blastoma: a case report and literature review

**Authors:** Jun Li, Si Chen, Qiliang Liu, Ming Li

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2025.1727839 · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

A rare case of long-term survival in an adult with advanced lung cancer highlights the potential of aggressive treatment combinations.

## Contribution

The paper presents a rare case of a patient with advanced CBPB surviving over six years and identifies multimodal therapy as a potential strategy.

## Key findings

- Aggressive multimodal therapy led to long-term survival in a stage IIIC CBPB patient.
- Literature review found 13 CBPB patients surviving more than three years, with five surviving five or more years.
- Surgery and multimodal treatment were common among long-term survivors.

## Abstract

Pulmonary blastoma (PB) is an exceedingly rare and aggressive primary lung malignancy. Classic biphasic pulmonary blastoma (CBPB), a subtype, is associated with a historically poor prognosis, particularly in advanced stages. There is no standard treatment for advanced CBPB, and reports of long-term survival are exceptionally rare. We present a case of prolonged disease-free survival in an adult with stage IIIC CBPB and review contemporary long-term survivors to identify prognostic factors.

A 32-year-old female presented with cough and dyspnea. Imaging revealed a large mass in the left upper lobe with mediastinal and supraclavicular lymph node involvement, leading to a diagnosis of stage IIIC CBPB. The patient received six cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy with ifosfamide plus epirubicin (IFO + EPI) and achieved a partial response. She subsequently underwent left upper lobectomy and lymph node dissection. Due to dense adhesion of mediastinal lymph node station 5 to the aortic arch, phrenic nerve, and vagus nerve, complete resection was not feasible, resulting in R2 resection (macroscopic residual disease). Postoperatively, she completed adjuvant chemoradiotherapy (one cycle of IFO + EPI, concurrent radiotherapy 54 Gy combined with docetaxel plus carboplatin, and two cycles of docetaxel plus cisplatin). As of July 2025, the patient has remained disease-free for more than six years post-diagnosis, demonstrating exceptional long-term survival.

This case highlights that aggressive multimodal therapy, including neoadjuvant chemotherapy, surgical resection, and adjuvant radiotherapy, can lead to long-term survival in advanced CBPB patients. A literature review (from 2000 to present) revealed 13 CBPB patients surviving > 3 years, with 5 of them surviving ≥ 5 years. Most of these patients underwent surgery and multimodal treatment. Aggressive local therapy for recurrent disease and antiangiogenic agents and immunotherapy represent promising strategies to improve outcomes in this rare malignancy.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** ifosfamide (PubChem CID 3690), epirubicin (PubChem CID 41867), docetaxel (PubChem CID 148124), carboplatin (PubChem CID 426756), cisplatin (PubChem CID 5460033)
- **Diseases:** pulmonary blastoma (MONDO:0005933)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CBPB (MESH:D018202), cough (MESH:D003371), stage IIIC (MESH:C566891), lung malignancy (MESH:D008175), malignancy (MESH:D009369), dyspnea (MESH:D004417)
- **Chemicals:** carboplatin (MESH:D016190), ifosfamide (MESH:D007069), cisplatin (MESH:D002945), docetaxel (MESH:D000077143), IFO + EPI (-), epirubicin (MESH:D015251)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12851945/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12851945