crizotinib has been researched along with Histiocytosis* in 2 studies
1 review(s) available for crizotinib and Histiocytosis
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Failure of crizotinib based systemic treatment in ALK positive histiocytosis involving the central nervous system: a case report and literature review.
Among the histiocytic disorders, anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)-positive histiocytosis emerged in 2008. As more and more cases of the novel entity are reported, our understanding of it is deepened. However, only a few cases with central nervous system (CNS) involvement have been reported. Furthermore, the lesion in the suprasellar region has not been documented. CASE PRESENTATION: We presented a case of ALK-positive histiocytosis involving the suprasellar region of a one-year-and-four-month-old boy. Through clinical, neuropathological, and genomic analyses, the patient was diagnosed with ALK-positive histiocytosis. After lesions were resected he started treatment with a combination of the three compounds vincristine, prednisolone, and crizotinib, but they did not work. Cytarabine was then added as an additional chemotherapy drug for him, and the lesions in the brain and lungs were shrunk by combining treatment of crizotinib, dexamethasone, vincristine, and cytarabine according to the RECIST (esponse Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumours).. Additional adjuvant chemotherapy drugs are needed when ALK-inhibitor treatment is ineffective. Topics: Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase; Central Nervous System; Crizotinib; Cytarabine; Histiocytosis; Humans; Infant; Male; Vincristine | 2022 |
1 other study(ies) available for crizotinib and Histiocytosis
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ALK-positive histiocytosis: an expanded clinicopathologic spectrum and frequent presence of KIF5B-ALK fusion.
In 2008, we presented three cases of ALK-positive histiocytosis as a novel systemic histiocytic proliferation of early infancy with hepatosplenomegaly and dramatic hematological disturbances. This series of 10 cases (including the original three cases) describes an expanded clinicopathological spectrum and the molecular findings of this histiocytic proliferation. Six patients had disseminated disease: five presented in early infancy with eventual disease resolution, and the sixth presented at 2 years of age and died of intestinal, bone marrow, and brain involvement. The other four patients had localized disease involving nasal skin, foot, breast, and intracranial cavernous sinus - the first three had no recurrence after surgical resection, while the cavernous sinus lesion showed complete resolution with crizotinib therapy. The lesional histiocytes were very large, with irregularly folded nuclei, fine chromatin, and abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm, sometimes with emperipolesis. There could be an increase in foamy histiocytes and Touton giant cells with time, resembling juvenile xanthogranuloma. Immunostaining showed that the histiocytes were positive for ALK, histiocytic markers (CD68, CD163) and variably S100, while being negative for CD1a, CD207, and BRAF-V600E. Next-generation sequencing-based anchored multiplex PCR (Archer® FusionPlex®) performed in six cases identified KIF5B-ALK gene fusion in five and COL1A2-ALK fusion in one. There was no correlation of gene fusion type with disease localization or dissemination. The clinicopathological spectrum of ALK-positive histiocytosis is broader than originally described, and this entity is characterized by frequent presence of KIF5B-ALK gene fusion. We recommend that every unusual histiocytic proliferative disorder, especially disseminated lesions, be tested for ALK expression because of the potential efficacy of ALK inhibitor therapy in unresectable or disseminated disease. Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Cell Proliferation; Child, Preschool; Crizotinib; Female; Gene Fusion; Genetic Predisposition to Disease; Histiocytes; Histiocytosis; Hong Kong; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Oncogene Proteins, Fusion; Phenotype; Protein Kinase Inhibitors; Singapore; Treatment Outcome; Victoria | 2019 |