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      Bystander effect and abscopal effect in recurrent thymic carcinoma treated with carbon-ion radiation therapy: A case report

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          Abstract

          BACKGROUND

          Although the bystander effect and abscopal effect are familiar in medicine, they are relatively rare in clinical practice. Herein, we report the case of a patient who demonstrated an obvious bystander effect and abscopal effect response following carbon-ion irradiation for recurrent thymic carcinoma.

          CASE SUMMARY

          A 44-year-old female presented with shortness of breath. Eleven years prior, she was diagnosed with athymic tumor located in the anterosuperior mediastinum. She underwent extensive tumor resection, and the postoperative pathologic diagnosis was thymic carcinoma. She was administered 50 Gy/25 Fx of postoperative radiation. In 2019, she was diagnosed with a recurrence of thymic carcinoma, with multiple recurrent nodules and masses in the left thoracic chest and peritoneal cavity, the largest of which was in the diaphragm pleura proximal to the pericardium, with a size of 6.7 cm × 5.3 cm × 4.8 cm. She received carbon-ion radiotherapy. After carbon-ion radiotherapy treatment, the treated masses and the untreated masses were observed to have noticeably shrunk on the day of carbon-ion radiotherapy completion and on follow-up imaging. We followed the CARE Guidelines for consensus-based clinical case reporting guideline development and completed the CARE Checklist of information to report this case.

          CONCLUSION

          This report is the first of obvious abscopal and bystander effects following carbon-ion irradiation in a human patient, and further research is needed to better elucidate the mechanisms of bystander and abscopal effects.

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          Most cited references21

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          The CARE Guidelines: Consensus-based Clinical Case Reporting Guideline Development

          Background: A case report is a narrative that describes, for medical, scientific, or educational purposes, a medical problem experienced by one or more patients. Case reports written without guidance from reporting standards are insufficiently rigorous to guide clinical practice or to inform clinical study design. Primary Objective: Develop, disseminate, and implement systematic reporting guidelines for case reports. Methods: We used a three-phase consensus process consisting of (1) premeeting literature review and interviews to generate items for the reporting guidelines, (2) a face-to-face consensus meeting to draft the reporting guidelines, and (3) postmeeting feedback, review, and pilot testing, followed by finalization of the case report guidelines. Results: This consensus process involved 27 participants and resulted in a 13-item checklist—a reporting guideline for case reports. The primary items of the checklist are title, key words, abstract, introduction, patient information, clinical findings, timeline, diagnostic assessment, therapeutic interventions, follow-up and outcomes, discussion, patient perspective, and informed consent. Conclusions: We believe the implementation of the CARE (CAse REport) guidelines by medical journals will improve the completeness and transparency of published case reports and that the systematic aggregation of information from case reports will inform clinical study design, provide early signals of effectiveness and harms, and improve healthcare delivery.
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            Whole body irradiation; radiobiology or medicine?

            David Mole (1953)
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              Carbon ion radiotherapy in Japan: an assessment of 20 years of clinical experience.

              Charged particle therapy is generally regarded as cutting-edge technology in oncology. Many proton therapy centres are active in the USA, Europe, and Asia, but only a few centres use heavy ions, even though these ions are much more effective than x-rays owing to the special radiobiological properties of densely ionising radiation. The National Institute of Radiological Sciences (NIRS) Chiba, Japan, has been treating cancer with high-energy carbon ions since 1994. So far, more than 8000 patients have had this treatment at NIRS, and the centre thus has by far the greatest experience in carbon ion treatment worldwide. A panel of radiation oncologists, radiobiologists, and medical physicists from the USA and Europe recently completed peer review of the carbon ion therapy at NIRS. The review panel had access to the latest developments in treatment planning and beam delivery and to all updated clinical data produced at NIRS. A detailed comparison with the most advanced results obtained with x-rays or protons in Europe and the USA was then possible. In addition to those tumours for which carbon ions are known to produce excellent results, such as bone and soft-tissue sarcoma of the skull base, head and neck, and pelvis, promising data were obtained for other tumours, such as locally recurrent rectal cancer and pancreatic cancer. The most serious impediment to the worldwide spread of heavy ion therapy centres is the high initial capital cost. The 20 years of clinical experience at NIRS can help guide strategic decisions on the design and construction of new heavy ion therapy centres. Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                World J Clin Cases
                WJCC
                World Journal of Clinical Cases
                Baishideng Publishing Group Inc
                2307-8960
                6 August 2021
                6 August 2021
                : 9
                : 22
                : 6538-6543
                Affiliations
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China
                Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China. zlyyyyc@ 123456163.com
                Author notes

                Author contributions: Zhang YS and Zhang YH have the same contribution to this article; Zhang YS, Li XJ, Zhang YH and Hu TC designed the experiment; Chen WZ, Pan X and Chai HY drafted the work; Ye YC collected the data; Zhang YS and Li XJ analyzed and interpreted data; Zhang YH and Hu TC wrote the article.

                Supported by Key R&D Plan of Science and Technology Program of Gansu Province, China, No. 19YF3FH001.

                Corresponding author: Yan-Cheng Ye, PhD, Chief Doctor, Department of Heavy Ion Center, Wuwei Cancer Hospital, No. 31 Sanitary Alley, Haizang Road, Wuwei 733000, Gansu Province, China. zlyyyyc@ 123456163.com

                Article
                jWJCC.v9.i22.pg6538
                10.12998/wjcc.v9.i22.6538
                8362568
                34435023
                12f032f9-dacc-41d9-9c40-79477890184b
                ©The Author(s) 2021. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.

                This article is an open-access article that was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/Licenses/by-nc/4.0/

                History
                : 15 April 2021
                : 15 May 2021
                : 17 June 2021
                Categories
                Case Report

                bystander effect,abscopal effect,recurrent thymic carcinoma,carbon-ion radiation therapy,case report

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