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[An elderly case of squamous cell lung cancer treated continuously with pembrolizumab without any decline in the life function].

BACKGROUND: Whether or not immune checkpoint inhibitors are safe and effective for the elderly remains unclear, even though these drugs were approved two years ago for the treatment of advanced non-small cell lung cancer in Japan. Older cancer patients are vulnerable to chemotherapy, so their life function should be closely monitored before starting, continuing, or discontinuing cancer treatment.

CASE: An 85-year-old man showed a wedge-shaped shadow in the apical portion of the left lung on chest computed tomography. Unfortunately, repeated bronchoscopy revealed no malignancy. The shadow progressed over about one year, so a third bronchoscopy was performed, leading to a diagnosis of squamous-cell carcinoma (cT3N2M1a, stage IVA). Because PD-L1 immunohistochemical staining was positive for 80%-90% of the tumor cells, the patient was treated with pembrolizumab as the first-line therapy, and the tumor dramatically regressed, notably without any decline in the patient's life functions.

CONCLUSION: An elderly case of squamous-cell lung cancer was treated continuously with pembrolizumab without any decline in the patient's life function.

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