Between January 1985 and August 1991, 159 patients with small cell lung cancer received first-line chemotherapy and 123 (77%) were responders. Of these, 88 relapsed, the remainder having died of other or unknown diseases or being alive without carrying cancer. The relapsed patients were examined to evaluate the outcome of the treatment for relapsed small cell lung cancer and to identify the factors that would contribute to the response rates and the survival durations. Forty-eight of 88 relapsed patients received second-line chemotherapy. Of the 48, 3 were evaluated as showing a complete response, 13 as partial response, 9 as no change, 15 as progressive disease and 8 as not evaluable. The response rate was 33% (95% confidence interval 20.4-48.4%). The median survival time was 146 days. The duration and rate of response in first-line chemotherapy affected the response rates of the second-line chemotherapy, but without statistical significance (P = 0.058 and 0.067 respectively). Increased response duration, time off chemotherapy and previous response to first-line chemotherapy all had a positive effect on the survival times (P < 0.01). Relapsed small cell lung cancer still shows a response to second-line chemotherapy without lessening survival time, and thus clinical trials of new drugs or combination chemotherapeutic regimens for relapsed small cell lung cancer cases would be reasonably justified. Randomized comparative studies are warranted for determining the benefits of second-line chemotherapy for relapsed small cell lung cancer cases.
Low-grade B-cell lymphoma of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT-type lymphoma) is a rare thymic tumor, with only seven previous cases described worldwide to date. We describe the only case to have presented with pulmonary amyloid nodules. A 63-year-old Japanese female was found to have an anterior mediastinal tumor and multiple bilateral pulmonary nodules during a medical check-up in 1990 followed by chest radiography and computerized tomography. Because the mediastinal tumor grew larger, she was referred to the National Cancer Center Hospital East and hyperglobulinemia was pointed out. The thymus was resected through median sternotomy and pulmonary nodules were also resected through left thoracotomy. The solid and nodular tumor with several small satellite extensions and cyst formation was completely confined to within the thymus and the resected pulmonary nodules consisted of solid masses with a rough surface. Histologically, monotonous medium-sized centrocyte-like cells occupied the medulla of the thymus and infiltrated Hassall's corpuscles (lymphoepithelial lesions) and the resected pulmonary nodules consisted of eosinophilic amorphous deposits which showed birefringence on Congo Red staining. Immunohistochemically, the tumor cells were positive for CD20 and CD79a. IgG and kappa light chain restrictions were also found in plasmacytoid cells in the tumor. Clonal rearrangement of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene was demonstrated by polymerase chain reaction. We diagnosed this case as low-grade B-cell MALT-type lymphoma in the thymus and nodular pulmonary amyloidosis. Since the patient had only localized amyloid deposits in the lung far from the thymic malignant lymphoma and had high serum immunoglobulins, the pulmonary amyloid deposits might be derived from a circulating precursor associated with hyperglobulinemia.
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