Aggressive variant prostate cancer with multiple subcutaneous metastases: a case report

Int Cancer Conf J. 2024 Apr 18;13(3):250-255. doi: 10.1007/s13691-024-00673-7. eCollection 2024 Jul.

Abstract

A 71-year-old man with bone metastasis of hormone-sensitive prostate cancer was treated with androgen deprivation therapy and apalutamide. Radium-223 and radiation therapy were administered after it become castration resistant. Although prostate-specific antigen levels remained low, multiple subcutaneous metastases of neuroendocrine prostate cancer were observed. A review of the pre-treatment prostate needle biopsy revealed a small component with features suggestive of neuroendocrine differentiation. Phosphatase and tensine homolog loss and tumor protein p53 overexpression were observed, confirming the diagnosis of aggressive variant prostate cancer. Platinum-based chemotherapy was administered; however, the patient died 28 months after diagnosis. In this case, if the diagnosis of aggressive variant prostate cancer had been made at an earlier time by biopsy specimens, there might have been a possibility to improve the prognosis by the earlier introduction of the platinum-based regimen.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s13691-024-00673-7.

Keywords: Aggressive variant prostate cancer; Neuroendocrine differentiation; Neuroendocrine prostate cancer; Subcutaneous metastasis.