sch1979 0 Report post Posted December 18, 2018 Has anyone had mixed results from chemo/immunotherapy? My uncle was diagnosed with stage iv nsclc (exon 20 mutation) in April. It has spread to the bones, lymph nodes and adrenal glands. He did 6 rounds of chemo with immunotherapy (alimta/keytruda/carbo) and then continued with keytruda/alimta. We just received his first PET and brain MRI results since his initial diagnosis and while some of the cancer shrunk, some grew and there are new lesions not seen in April. The oncologist said not to be alarmed and wants to continue immunotherapy and re-test in three months. Is that a typical response/course of treatment for mixed results from chemo? I'm very concerned about the new growth. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Tom Galli 2,357 Report post Posted December 19, 2018 Sch, I’ve found there is no typical in lung cancer. I’ve often heard that existing tumors grow after immunotherapy and that growth is explained as inflammation from the immunotherapy assault. I’ve heard less frequently that new mets appear after immunotherapy. So your uncle’s response kind of aligns with “typical”, the new mets being rather unusual. Keytruda is good stuff. Give it a chance and we’ll know a lot more in 3 months. Stay the course. Tom 1 LexieCat reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Steff 897 Report post Posted December 19, 2018 My mom had Keytruda + Alimta/Carbo for 6 sessions and then proceeded with Keytruda only. She had what looked like progression around her tumor for quite sometime. The docs suspected inflammation, but watched it closely in regular scans. As Tom said, seeing initial "growth" is pretty typical in immunotherapy; new lesions, not so much. But that does not mean that the treatment is not working. Those lesions could have grown between initial scan and treatment starting. Unless a scan was taken the day treatment started, we just don't know. Take Care, Steff Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BridgetO 1,384 Report post Posted December 19, 2018 I wonder, and this is just speculation, whether he could have more than one type or subtype of lung cancer at the same time, and some responding better or differently than others. Has anybody experienced this? A co-worker of mine had 3 kinds of breast cancer at the same time. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PaulaC 322 Report post Posted December 19, 2018 5 hours ago, BridgetO said: I wonder, and this is just speculation, whether he could have more than one type or subtype of lung cancer at the same time, and some responding better or differently than others. Has anybody experienced this? A co-worker of mine had 3 kinds of breast cancer at the same time. BridgetO, my oncologist is suggesting that I had two types and I’m still not clear on it. The fortunate thing for me is the treatment worked on both. Squamish cell and adenocarcinoma. 🤷♀️ 1 BridgetO reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites